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  1. "I and someone", "me and someone" or "I and someone we"

    40 "I and someone are interested" is grammatically correct. It is the convention in English that when you list several people including yourself, you put yourself last, so you really should say …

  2. formality - Your Grace, Your Majesty, Your Highness... Does it all …

    Jan 5, 2017 · 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? …

  3. Someone, anyone, somebody, everybody. Are those 3rd or 1st …

    Dec 15, 2019 · Nobody says that the earth is flat. Note that, in the "nobody will believe them" clause, believe is not a third person plural but a bare infinitive because it follows will. If you tell …

  4. genderless pronouns - Why use "their" after "someone"? - English ...

    Oct 15, 2015 · "Someone has forgotten their book". Why can we use 'Their" and what's the difference if instead of "their" we use "his/her"?

  5. What is difference between renter, tenant and rentee?

    Nov 3, 2015 · 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 …

  6. differences - Get hold of, get ahold of, get a hold of - English ...

    The three variations of this expression exist and are acceptable. The meaning actually depends on what follows of, so get hold/ahold of someone means communicate with/reach someone …

  7. Asking a question "to", "from", or "of"?

    This seems quirky to me however. 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 …

  8. grammatical number - Plural form of "someone"'? - English …

    Someone, and indeed any indefinite pronoun that ends in "one" is always singular. The word people is a good choice; however, the second part of your compound sentence sounds as if …

  9. or ++ in emails - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Nov 18, 2019 · I would agree with instinct71. It's used as follows: - say an email is sent to a list of recipients, but someone was omitted or the topic needs to include other recipient (s). The new …

  10. What is the difference between 'share to' and 'share with'?

    Jan 23, 2024 · You actually said that in the UK in pre-internet times? e.g. Someone has shared an anatomically correct drawing to the toilet wall or A funny story has been shared by Anonymous …