Between her and him :) "he" and "she" (along with I) are nominative case pronouns. They are the subject of a sentence : She went to the store. He was late. I guess so. "Him","her", and "me" are not. I'm not sure in English what the correct term is for words that are used with prepositions, but when you use words like "to", "from", "in", "on", "with", "between", "by" etc, they you would use "him", "her" and "me". So SHE gave it TO HIM. HE found HER. If it would be "her" then it would be "him and her" or "her and me". Whatever would be the case in the singular would also be the case in the plural. "He gave it to me and him". You wouldn't say "between I and the doorpost". Whenever you would say "I", you would also say "he" or "she", and whenever you would say "me", you would say "him" and "her".
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "here is a copy of the email between Sally and me" because "me" is the appropriate pronoun in that context as it functions as the object of the preposition "between."
Get lost - Poi Tholai(Informal)Poda - to a malePodee - to a femalePoda and Podee can be also used in a affectionate way between friends or lovers. It depends on how you say it.
It is more common to say "related to" rather than "related with." The phrase "related to" is used to indicate a connection or association between two or more things.
Gomennasai and Sumimasen can both mean "I'm Sorry" and in times when you want to say "Excuse me", it is usual to say Sumimasen... Another difference is, Sumimasen can mean Thank you....
If I had to choose between "between she and you" and "between she and you" I would definitely go with "between her and you". :o)The part "she and you" is object in the sentence and it should therefore be "her and you".A way to remember it is that you would also say "between us" and not "between we".
"Between him and his wife" is correct. You wouldn't say "It's between they". You would say "It's between them". So the objective pronoun (him) is correct and not the subjective pronoun (he).
I can say (you are kidding) and i can say (you are joking)?
entre
Compare means to say what is alike between one or more things. Contrast is to say what is different between them.
Say what
Cross between Mar-say and Mahh-say (Mar-say with a French 'r' if you can). But if you say "Mar-say" you should be just fine.
Not necessarily. You can be between two people, so your position is in between them. However, while you might say, "Between you and me, I think something is wrong", you would not say "In between you and me, I think something is wrong". These two statements would infer completely different meanings.
say if you say something right now tall if you tell them a secrat or something like that
it is a relation between the creator and the created
In the UK they say w995i in US they say w995a
when i say so