Who is this is it correct?

You would say “Who is this” because this is a Predicate Nominative and shares the same context as the subject. For example, both “Who is this?” (Subjective) and “Whom is that?” (Objective) are correct. Also, “Whose is this?” is also correct (Possessive).

Who is me or who am I?

1 Answer. Yes, you should use “who am I”. The subject is “I”; the word “who” is not the subject, but comes at the start because it is a wh-word. The verb (or auxiliary) “am” comes before the subject because this is a question with subject-verb (subject-auxiliary) inversion, but it still agrees with the subject “I”.

Who is this or who is he?

When you are asking about someone, you should use “Who is he?” or “Who is she?” Is “Who is this?” at any time correct when asking about people? Of course “What is this?” is correct when asking about things.

Which is correct this is me or it is me?

What we’re saying is that both are “correct” in some sense. “This is I” is correct technically. “This is me” is what the vast, vast majority of people actually say in practice. “This is me” is not technically correct, but it is what most people say in reality.

Who should I say has called?

It is correct to use “who’ as the subject and “whom” as the object. In your example, “who” is the subject of the predicate clause “who is calling”. Rearrange the sentence as, “Should I say who is calling?” and it becomes clearer. The confusion arises because there are two verbs in the sentence.

Who are or who is in English grammar?

Who are your closest friends? So the grammatical rule would be that when “who” is not followed by a noun that refers to it, the verb is singular. However, when there is a plural noun that serves as the predicate nominative for “who,” the verb is plural. Who speaks Spanish in this class?

What does so am I mean?

“So am I” means “I am too”. “So I am” means “Indeed, I am”.

Who is she or who she is?

“Who is she?” is a question and a complete sentence. “Who she is” is not a complete sentence. It needs a subject and verb to complete it.

How do you answer who is this?

“Who is this?” is asking you to identify this person. “This” is a pointer word: you say it while pointing to a person. The normal reply is “This is Judy” or “This is my mother”, not “It is”.

Can I say it is I?

While it is formally correct to say “It’s I”, while informal or popular usage allows “It’s me”, it would be incorrect to say “It’s him and I” (as in the title of a currently popular song), which mixes objective and nominative cases; it could be either “It’s he and I” or “It’s him and me”. Who called Jodie? It was he.

Which is grammatically correct this is she or this is her?

“This is she” is grammatically correct. The verb “to be” acts as a linking verb, equating subject and object. So this is she and she is this; “she” and “this” are one and the same, interchangeable, and to be truly interchangeable they must both play the same grammatical role—that of the subject.


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