It is the convention in english that when you list several people including yourself, you put yourself last, so you really should say someone and i are interested. someone and i is the subject of the sentence, so you should use the subjective case i rather than the objective me. What is the word that describes a person who uses other people, generally for personal gain, without anything given in return Maybe through blatancy or through manipulation What is more applicable when writing said someone or said by someone e.g Said elon musk or said by elon musk 0 someone = in present tense, a sentient being with a subjective experience
Something = an unknown entity or an object That's right a someone, all sentient animal are a someone. When someone forces his own ideology, beliefs and thoughts on someone else and not allow them to think for themselves When a head chairman state his opinion about a political candidate and makes everyone else in the department approve of him and refuse anyone else to belief anything but what they said. For an example, let's say there. Actually this is not a bad question
This silence leads me to believe. I would like know if i should use of or from to refer to a university a person belongs to, such as in the following sentence Tom of / from the university of california. What would you call someone who does things knowing specifically that his/her actions will cause pain and/or conflict or completes an action just to get someone in trouble or hurt them
OPEN