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  • I and someone, me and someone or I and someone we
    "Someone and I" is the subject of the sentence, so you should use the subjective case "I" rather than the objective "me" "Someone and I" clearly means two people, so you should use "are" and not "is" If it was "Someone or I " then you would use "is", because only one person is interested, either "someone" or "I"
  • Someone, anyone, somebody, everybody. Are those 3rd or 1st person?
    If someone says that the earth is flat, nobody will believe them If somebody says that the earth is flat, nobody will believe them Everybody says that the earth is round If anybody says that the earth is flat, nobody will believe them Nobody says that the earth is flat
  • formality - Your Grace, Your Majesty, Your Highness. . . Does it all mean . . .
    A lot of ways you can actually address the queen or someone from the royal family But do these all phrases mean the exact same thing or is there a difference between them? Maybe it depends whether the person you're talking to is actually in power now or maybe just a member of the royal family Maybe it depends on what is your political status
  • What is difference between renter, tenant and rentee?
    A renter is a person who pays rent in order to use something that to belongs to someone else, whether it be a house, room or even a car But a tenant can be a renter, free occupier or a caretaker of someone's property eg House, Room etc
  • Should I write said someone or said by someone
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • nouns - Word for someone who pays attention to details - English . . .
    Not so Reg Dwight comments: "Searching a reverse dictionary for "someone who is very concerned about the fine details" returns punctilious, fastidious, meticulous, and many more " And from the AHD: punc·til·i·ous (pngk-tl-s) adj 1 Strictly attentive to minute details of form in action or conduct See Synonyms at meticulous 2 Precise
  • Asking a question to, from, or of?
    If you "ask X from someone", it means that you ask them to give you an X So to me, whereas "asking an answer from" makes sense, "asking a question from" doesn't, unless you're asking for a question I've seen a source on the internet that says "of" is the correct rule
  • grammar - Someone of or from the university? - English Language . . .
    I would like know if I should use of or from to refer to a university a person belongs to, such as in the following sentence: We thank Dr John and Dr Tom of from the University of California


















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