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How do you say my brother and I?
“My brother and I …” is the correct choice, but you’ll hear people use the ones with “me”.
Does or do your brother?
Your brother and sister both are individually single persons. Do is plural. Does is singular. So, use does.
Do you have any sibling or siblings?
Senior Member. “Sibling” is not wrong at all but the word tends to be used in professional and academic circles (mainly in the plural) and it is rare to hear the singular in ordinary conversation in which “a brother or a sister” / “brothers and sisters” is the usual term.
Is it correct to say I have one brother and one sister?
Both is ok, the “one brother and one sister” part just puts some extra stress on the number, like if someone ask you what’s up with your two sisters? you can answer that “i have one brother and one sister”, implying that the person asking the question had incorrect information about your siblings. Both are correct, but ‘a’ is not the same as ‘one’.
Do you have a brother or have you got a brother?
For the affirmative you may say: “I have a brother,” or “I have got a brother.” For the interrogative you may ask: “Have you got any brothers/siblings?” (Mostly British English); “Do you have any siblings?” (mostly American English). “Have you a brother?” is not much in use anymore.
Is it correct to say siblings?
It’s true that in English, sibling isn’t the most common word in the world, but I’ve noticed that it’s more common now than it was a generation ago. I have two siblings, that is, one brother and one sister is fine; a little more natural would be I have two siblings — a brother and a sister.
What is a good sentence for I have a brother?
I have a brother. I have got a brother. I ‘ve got a brother. You have a sister. You have got a sister. You ‘ve got a sister. He has a cat. He has got a cat. He ‘s got a cat. She has a dog. She has got a dog.