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. Vacillators do not inspire confidence This is why “someone cleans the house” is a correct and natural sounding sentence
What If Someone Leaks Your Private Photos?
However, there is this idiomatic construction
To have + someone+ do something (infinitive without to) which means 'to get somebody to do something'.
I’m curious to know why the number 86 came to represent the refusal of service at service establishments Does someone know the provenance I'm looking for a word that describes someone who dislikes change even while their current situation is less than favorable and keeps things even if they are old, worn and crumbling 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 I'm not looking for the absolutely precise medical term for a mental illness (because such behavior may not in fact be an illness), just an informal word. Provide (something) for (someone/something) provide (something) to (someone/something) for example, the umbrellas provide shade for the guests He provided drugs to the prisoners
In both of these examples, one could have swapped to and for, although the sentences as written feel more natural.
Someone who intentionally says false statements and/or facts about someone else (directly related to and/or about them) with whom that person is in a conversation (with or without other people around), in order to embarress that person, bring them down or prevent/break the peace. This film is a coming of age story about a young man who rebuffs societal norms and the expectations of his parents on his path to maturity. People prefer an unequivocal position from their leaders