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8 Answers
- LynnmarieLv 72 months ago
John and I when they are the subject of the sentence; John and me when they are the object.
- Anonymous7 months ago
It is John & I, only if I is followed by a verb.
Source(s): It's John & I, only if I is followed by a verb. - Anonymous8 months ago
Don't know what the hell everyone else is going on about, but it's definitely 'John and I'. Getting into the habit of saying 'me and John' is a bad habit and also atrocious grammar.
- Anonymous9 months ago
It is John and I if they are the actors, for example, John and I played basketball.
It is John and me if they are the recipients. For example, the pickup basketball team gave John and me a shellacking.
- .Lv 79 months ago
Rule of thumb is to remove the reference to the other person, and consider how you'd say it if you were just referring to yourself:
Example: if you take out John's name, would you say "I am going to do something" or "Me is going to do something"?
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- Anonymous9 months ago
Depends.
In some cases it's ok to say me.
- Anonymous9 months ago
John and I walk around the lake. Subject with verb.
Jill gave John and me a sandwich. Predicate no verb.
- JoleneLv 79 months ago
Depends on the context.Way I learned it was: take the other person out of the sentence. Would you use "me" or "I"? "She gave me a sandwich." So it's "She gave John and me a sandwich".