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Is it grammatically correct to say me first?

Is it grammatically correct to say me first?

That’s your Quick and Dirty Tip: Always put the pronouns “me,” “my,” and “I” last in a list. For other pronouns, you can put them where they sound right to you, but if I’m mixing nouns and pronouns, I usually think it sounds better to put the pronoun first. Always put the pronouns “me,” “my,” and “I” last in a list.

Does I go before or after other person?

“I” should be used because it’s the correct choice when it comes to subjects. It can also be helpful to consider the position of the word in the sentence. “I” is used before the verb, while “me” is almost always used after the verb (the exception being the predicate nominative).

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Which comes first me or the other person?

Answer: In sentences it is customary to put the other person before yourself. So the sentence should be “The package came to Becki and me.”

Can I use ‘I was enjoyed’ instead of ‘I got excited’?

The first one is correct. You can’t use ‘I was enjoyed’ because ‘excited’ and ‘enjoyed’ are not equivalent parts of speech. ‘Excited’ is an adjective, and adjectives are states of being – you can BE excited. You WERE excited. ‘Enjoyed’ is NOT an adjective. It’s the past tense of a verb.

What is the difference between excited and enjoy?

The first one is correct because “excite” is a verb that requires an object if used in absence of a “be” form of verb. E.g. faint smell of her cologne excited him from deep within. However, the second one is correct because “enjoy” is a verb that doesn’t require an object and talks about the subject. E.g.

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Is it correct to say I excited or I was excited?

In the sense you probably mean it “I was excited” is correct. “Excited” is usually an adjective “I was excited” is a complete sentence meaning at some point in the past you were experiencing excitement. However “excited” is also the past tense of the verb “excite”, and used in that sense “I excited” is incomplete without an object.

Which is the correct definition of the word ‘excite’?

The first one is correct because “excite” is a verb that requires an object if used in absence of a “be” form of verb. E.g. faint smell of her cologne excited him from deep within.