Table of Contents
What is different between me and my?
My is a possessive adjective. My mother loves me. Well they both are – sort of, but the use of the possessive, “my telling jokes in class ” serves to isolate the telling of jokes as the object of my teacher’s anger. It’s hopefully not “me” at whom she/he has become upset, but the telling of jokes.
Where is my bag which type of sentence?
Answer: This is my bag. This type of sentence is assertive sentence and simple sentence.
How do you use me and my?
Each word is a different part of speech and has a different role to play in a sentence.
- I is a subject pronoun. Use it before the verb.
- Me is an object pronoun. Use it after the verb.
- Myself is a reflexive pronoun.
- My is a possessive pronoun.
What is grammatically correct me or myself?
In general, when the speaker is the object of a verb, but not the subject, choose me. When the speaker is both the subject and the object of a verb, choose myself. Since myself and subject both contain the letter S, this should be an easy rule to remember.
Is bag a slang word?
The slang term “Bag” (sometimes referred to as The Bag or A Bag) are nouns which are used to reference money.
What does it mean to bag a girl?
1. verb To arrest someone. After trying to bag these guys for months, we were finally able to bring them into the station tonight. 2. verb To get or obtain something.
What is bag sentence?
“This bag is too heavy.” (heavy, big, large) “I have a plastic bag.” (plastic, canvas, cloth, leather, paper, shoulder, duffel) “We’ll put the food in a freezer bag.”
Is ‘whose bag is this bag’ proper grammar?
Whose is this bag is not proper grammar. Whose bag is this sounds good or you can say who does this bag belong to. Do not say whose does this bag belong to as the comment above said. It is improper grammatical use of who.
What is the grammatical form of “belong to”?
When we talk about a grammatical person, we mean the first, second, third person singular or the first, second and third person plural such as I, you, he, she, it, we, they. “Belong to” and “belongs to” are both in the Present Simple Tense but they are referring to different people.
What does what’s your bag mean?
Also; “What’s your bag” meaning what’s your problem or where are you coming from. For the second sentence it may refer to: Slang An area of interest or skill: Cooking is not my bag. I remember hearing that phrase as a little girl.
Who brought the bag or who brought it?
The answer you would get to the question posed would be “The bag belongs to him” rather than “The bag belongs to he.” So “whom” is the technically correct pronoun. Now suppose you are wondering whether to ask “Who brought this bag” or “Whom brought this bag.” Now the answer you would get would be “He brought the bag.”