If you and your mom are both the subject of the verb, then it will be “my mom and I”. For example: “My mom and I are going to the movies.” If only you are going you say, “I am going to the movies.” You would never say, “Me is going to the movies.” In this way you know that it is “I” and NOT “me”.
Do you say my mom and I or my mom and me?
If you are writing/speaking a complete sentence, you should use “It’s a picture of Mom and me.” The correct pronoun is “me” because it is the object of the preposition “of.” You can simplify the sentence to read “It’s a picture of me” which may help you choose the correct pronoun.
Do you say me and my parents or my parents and I?
If it’s the subject of a sentence, the correct phrasing is, “my family and I,” as in “My family and I spoke to a counselor.” If it’s the object of a preposition, the correct phrasing is, “my family and me,” as in “A counselor spoke to my family and me.”
Is it grammatically correct to say me and someone?
I and someone is grammatical; me and someone is not strictly grammatical, but is very common; I and someone we is not grammatical, and sounds wrong to native English speakers.
Is it Joey and me or Joey?
If you are saying that you an Joey are together and this is your anniversary as a couple, you can treat ‘me and Joey’ as a single noun phrase, in which case “me and Joey’s” is fine.
Can I say I and my family?
“I and my family …” may be grammatically correct, but it’s definitely not polite. The polite way to phrase that is: “My family and I …” as the subject of a sentence, or “My family and me …” as the object. the rule here is that “you” are always the last person.
Which is correct you and your family or your family and you?
Is it “you and your family is” or “you and your family are”? You should use are because “you and your family” is a plural subject. When the subject of a sentence has two parts joined by “and” it makes the subject plural, so you should use a plural verb. Below are more examples of sentence subjects with two parts.
Is it my and my family or mine and my family?
English (U.S.) #2 is incorrect because it is not “mine life”. You could say It has made a difference in my and my family’s lives. Since you are a member of your family, you could also say It has made a difference in the lives of all of the members of my family.
Do you say my daughter and I or my daughter and me?
Both are correct. If you are trying to pass an English exam in school, use “My daughter and I”. The logic here is that, without “My daughter”, you’d obviously say “I went to the zoo”, not *”Me went to the zoo”, so the “I” should stay, because it’s still part of the subject.
Which is correct Sally and me or Sally and I?
If you are using the subject form, “Sally and I” is correct. If you are using the object form, “Sally and me” is correct. For example, “Sally and I went to the cinema”, and “He gave presents to Sally and me” would be correct.
Which one is me or which one am I?
The most grammatically ‘correct’ version of that sentence would be “which one am I?” The verb to be takes the subject case (‘I’), not the object case (‘me’, as in “which one of you poked me?”)
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