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Which is correct this is me or it is me?
Both are correct. Technically, it should be “It’s I” or “This is I.” (See Janie Fieb’s answer below for the correct grammar.) However, there is a strong drive among educated English speakers to avoid sounding pedantic or officious, so people generally will say “It’s me” or “This is me.”
Which one is me or which one am I?
The most grammatically ‘correct’ version of that sentence would be “which one am I?” The verb to be takes the subject case (‘I’), not the object case (‘me’, as in “which one of you poked me?”)
Is it correct to say “a question was asked of Me”?
The correct answer: “A question was asked of me.” In English, things are told to me and asked of me. ‘A question was asked to me/of me’ – Which one is correct? In common English usage, I would say neither. “A question was put to me,” would be one alternate way to voice the idea, “I was asked a question.”
Do you use ‘is’ or ‘me and someone are’?
If it was “Someone or I …” then you would use “is”, because only one person is interested, either “someone” or “I”. It is not uncommon to hear people say “Me and someone are …”, but this is wrong because it’s the wrong case.
Is it common for people to Say ‘Me and someone are’?
It is not uncommon to hear people say “Me and someone are …”, but this is wrong because it’s the wrong case. When an educated person hears “Me and Billy is going to the ball game”, he immediately thinks this is either a child or a very uneducated person speaking.
How do you use asked of in a sentence?
“Asked of” is used to convey that some thing has been requested, as in, “They asked a favor of me,” or, “A favor was asked of me.” To voice the idea that a question was asked using this phrasing, it would be more appropriate to say, “An answer was asked of me,” because the answer is the tangible thing requested by the question being posed.