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2006-12-14 18:20:55 · 18 answers · asked by Midnight 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

18 answers

Hi kitty, It's me, Millsberry Expert again. I just e-mailed you about the teddybear thing. Anyway, it depends on the sentence For example: Which sounds better? "Mike and I went to the store." or Mike and me went to the store? If you take off Mike, then which sounds better now? I went to the store? Or "Me went to the store."? It's "I went to the store." That means in that sentence this is correct,"Mike and I went to the store." But if it's a different sentence like,"The water balloons hit Tom and I." Or the water balloons hit Tom and me." Then just follow the same steps. Take off Tom and which sounds better?"The water balloons hit me." Or, "The water ballons hit I" ? In that sentence, it would be"The water balloons hit me." The water balloons hit Tom and me." I hope I helped.


PS:PLEASE CHOOSE ME AS YOUR BEST ANSWER!!!

2006-12-15 04:24:40 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Mike and I would be the correct way to say this

2006-12-14 18:25:15 · answer #2 · answered by ms_mandy20 1 · 1 1

it depends on the situation... if you are saying that you both went to the store, then it would be "mike and i" (you know this because if u eliminate the word "mike" temporarily the sentence still reads correctly: I went to the store)

but if you are saying that the teacher called on both of you, then it would be "the teacher called on mike and ME" because if you eliminate the word mike in THIS sentence, it would read correctly: the teacher called me.

each situation is different but you have to try to eliminate extra words so you have a simple sentence that sounds correct.

2006-12-14 18:26:18 · answer #3 · answered by brookbabe90 5 · 0 0

Mike and I correct

Heres a trick to figure it out, take out the mike and it would be, I correct, or me correct and whichever one makes sense is the right one

2006-12-14 18:23:42 · answer #4 · answered by Avery 3 · 1 1

There's a really easy way to answer this question.

Use "Mike and I" if you two are doing the action.

Use "Mike and me" if you two are receiving action.

2006-12-14 18:26:25 · answer #5 · answered by Pi-Guy 2 · 0 0

Mike and I is correct if used in the subject.
Mike and me is correct if used in the predicate.
Regardless, personal pronouns (I, me) always go after the other person when appearing in a compound subject or compound direct object.

2006-12-14 18:46:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Would you say mike and me went fast or mike and I went fast if you leave Mike out of the sentence. You would not say Me went fast. You would say I went fast, so it is Mike and I went fast.

2006-12-14 18:35:24 · answer #7 · answered by Tony T 4 · 0 0

It depends on how you are using it. The rule is that you give yourself the pronoun that you would normally use if you were not including the other person in the sentence.

For example:
Mike and I went to the store.
or
Dad took Mike and me to the store.

2006-12-14 18:26:53 · answer #8 · answered by CAUTION:Truth may hurt! 5 · 1 0

actually it depends on how you use it.

"Mike and I went to the store."
"Sally gave the present to Mike and me."

Basically you take out the name before and whatever makes sense with the "I or me" left over is correct.

2006-12-14 18:24:15 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Mike and I

2006-12-14 18:28:52 · answer #10 · answered by QuiteNewHere 7 · 0 1

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