"You and I combined" versus "you and me combined"
Which is correct, "you and I combined" or "you and me combined"? as in:
Bob and I combined had 91 points
The "combined" confuses me.
Solution 1:
In the original sentence, "Bob and I combined had 91 points", combined isn't the main verb. You could rewrite the sentence and still maintain its meaning by saying:
Together, Bob and I had 91 points.
The combined is serving more as a qualifier of the subject "Bob and I" rather than as a verb. It could be described as a participle, which shares characteristics of both verbs and adjectives.
So in this case, "Bob and I combined" is correct.
Solution 2:
Try thinking of it in this way:
When Bob and I were combined, we had 91 points.
I hope that makes it clearer. To answer your question, "you and I combined" is correct.
Solution 3:
I would have said, "Bob and I had 91 points, combined." Combined is used to distinguish 91 total points from "Bob and I have 91 points each." (A comment about the compound subject: Informally, people might say, Bob and me or even Me and Bob in that sentence. You and I is correct as a subject, you and me is correct as an object.)