In this example, we'll squash the last 3 commits I got it is ungrammatical, and while it may correspond to the pronunciation used by many native speakers, in truth what sounds like i got it is the contracted form of i've got it. just because people don't know that's what they're saying doesn't mean that's not what they're saying They have the same effect on normal web browser rendering engines, but there is a fundamental difference between them
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As the author writes in a discussion list post
Think of three different situations
Every time i read a new and unknown word containing the letter 'i' i wonder how i should pronounce it What's very frustrating for me is that, when i look up the words, i find out that my gut feeli. Is there a performance difference between i++ and ++i in c++ Is there a reason some programmers write ++i in a normal for loop instead of writing i++?
The answer is far too long, and too advanced for a beginner whose question was when i do i use i and i have Clearly, the op is not even aware of the structure present perfect It would have been better to post a few links to previous questions on this site There are literally hundreds of questions about pp
I mean just look at the tag selected by the op
I and someone are interested is grammatically correct 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 Someone and i clearly means two people, so you. From fowler's modern english usage
In the first person ' shall has, from the early me period, been the normal auxiliary for expressing mere futurity without any adventitious notion' It then carries on for two full pages of fine print The short version is that if the subject is i or we, and the sentence is not a question, then shall has traditionally been correct, and will has. Why should we capitalize the first person pronoun 'i' even when it does not appear at the beginning of a sentence
Why is it not the case for other pronouns?