From the swansea (wales, uk). The basic rule decides whether it's an a or an an based on how you pronounce the noun. Am and admire are verbs, so you're just coordinating two verb phrases:
The pronoun who takes the same number. But it's actually quite easy. And coordinates two of the same type of phrase;
1 there is nothing whatsoever strange or ungrammatical about omitting a personal pronoun before 'am', 'are', 'is', etc, to avoid repetition. 10 grammatically there is nothing wrong with it. For instance, saying am going all by itself. I know that in practical, casual writing, people tend to use whatever form is most.
However, i recently ran a For reasons i can't recall. When reading everyday messages, i usually see people write me, jim, and john are going. I am an it degree holder.
Should it be am or are, or should the i come first, or should it be me. I am a fan of the opera and i am myself a fan of the opera essentially mean the. Is there any difference between these two statements? Asking google produces this getting relative pronouns like who to agree with verbs can seem tricky.
Is it correct to write i am gerardo and i am here. For a long time, i have been convinced that the use of the word am without the word i either before or after it is incorrect. Or i am gerardo and i'm here. If i am 60 and bored, i want to. if i am a cat, i want to be an orange one. if i can't finish the food, can you help me? is this tense of the conditional statement.