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- 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 "Someone and I are interested " "Someone and I" is the subject of the sentence, so you should use the subjective case "I" rather than the objective "me"
- 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 and get hold ahold of something means obtaining literally reaching out for something And I believe they convey the same meaning, with "get ahold of" being spoken English (apparently because it's easier to pronounce
- Someone, anyone, somebody, everybody. Are those 3rd or 1st person?
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 somebody to do something, you use an imperative which is the same as a bare infinitive: Someone call for an ambulance! Everybody keep quiet!
- grammatical number - Plural form of someone? - English Language . . .
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 you are talking to only one person You may want to restructure the sentence to reflect this
- 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
- nouns - Word for someone who pays attention to details - English . . .
Someone who pays attention to details is called a person who pays attention to details As FF has pointed out already, there really isn't one word that means this in any context If you really wanted a single noun that would do the job (and probably several others at the same time, a potential saving), you could call them a payer of attention
- What is the difference between share to and share with?
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 to the school magazine? We never said share to in AmE until the advent of internet social media
- or ++ in emails - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
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 recipient (s) are added to the To: or CC: fields and their names are also added to the body of the email with a ++ or + , just to inform everyone on the current distribution that others have been added to the
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