What is I am in English grammar?

What is I am in English grammar?

Am is used with first person singular (I) Is – is used with third person singular (he, she, Ramu, Manisha) Are – is used with third person plural (They, Indians, judges)

What does it mean so am I?

‘So am I’ means ‘I am xxx, too’. For example: ‘I’m thirsty’. ‘So am I. Let’s go and get a drink. ‘ ‘So I am’ is a less usual phrase, but we sometimes use it mean ‘You are right!

Are you correct grammar?

If they say ‘you are [adjective/noun/whatever]’ then yes it is correct. So: You are really kind! As are you! 🙂 But if somebody say something like ‘I really like you’, it wouldn’t work, because ‘as are you’ basically means ‘you are as well/too’.

Which one is you which one are you?

The correct answer is ‘Which one is you?’ . But you could say ‘You are which one?’ If ‘Which one’ is the subject of the sentence the verb is ‘is’.

Can we say how is you?

The pronoun YOU always takes a plural verb, even when it refers to only one person. So we always say “How are you?” never “How is you?”

Can you guess who am I or who I am?

“Guess who I am” is not a question – it is a command. Hence “Guess who I am” is the right form. I guess that “guess who I am” is correct because”guess who am I” is more like you asking yourself who you are like in a philosophical sense.

Is it correct to say how about you?

How about yourself is grammatically incorrect. When using reflexive pronouns, you should use a subject at least once, although you can have an implied use to e.g.. You did that to yourself or (You) Look at yourselves. It is grammatically correct to say How about you, yourself, but that’s pretty clunky.

How do you ask about you?

How to ask “How are you?” (informal)

  1. How’s everything?
  2. How’s it going?
  3. How are things?
  4. What’s up? — Around the year 2001, everyone, everywhere was saying this — thanks to this ad.
  5. How are you doing?
  6. What’s new?
  7. You all right?