Yes, for example:
Silly me, my ID is in my other purse. (adjective 'silly' describes the subject pronoun 'me')
Anyone with information is asked to call the hotline. (noun phrase, 'anyone with information' is the subject of the sentence, the indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is the simple subject of the sentence)
The garden which he tends carefully has won some prizes. (the relative pronoun 'which' is followed by the personal pronoun 'he', the subject of the relative clause)
The word " I " is not a preposition, it is a pronoun.
noun if it is used as the subject pronoun if it is used as predicate
The word 'they' is a subject pronoun; the corresponding object pronoun is 'them'.
The pronoun 'his' is a possessive pronoun and a possessive adjective. The possessive pronoun can be used a the subjective or objective. The possessive adjective can be used to describe a subject noun or an object noun. Examples:Possessive pronoun, subject: His is the blue car.Possessive pronoun, object: The blue car is his.Possessive adjective describing subject noun: Hiscar is blue.Possessive adjective describing object noun: The blue one is his car.
A pronoun is a word used to replace a noun, for example, he, she or it. A subject pronoun is when a pronoun is used in a sentence as the subject. For example: Mike ran the race. (Mike is a noun used to describe the subject of the sentence.) He ran the race. (He is considered a subject pronoun and is used in place of the noun/subject Mike.)
No, the word "him" is an objective pronoun, not a nominative pronoun. Nominative pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence, while objective pronouns are used as the object of a verb or preposition.
The word 'we' IS a subject pronoun; the first person, plural, personal pronoun that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Example: We saw the dog
The word "herself" is a reflexive pronoun. It is used to refer back to the subject of the sentence.
The nominative case pronoun is he, the subject of the sentence.
There is no pronoun used as an object. The pronoun 'you' is used twice in the sentence. The pronoun 'you' can be a subject or an object pronoun. The first 'you' is the subject pronoun, the subject of the sentence. The second 'you' is the subject of the noun clause 'what you expected to see'; the clause is the object of the sentence but the word you is the subject of that clause.
The word "itself" is a reflexive pronoun in English. It is used to refer back to the subject of the sentence.
The word our is a pronoun. It means to belong to us.