The pronoun it can function as a subject or an object:
Where is the pie?
subject: It is on the kitchen counter.
object: Have you tasted it?
The pronoun for Blanca is she (subjective) and her (objective).
The pronoun 'we' is the plural form, first person subjective personal pronoun. The singular, first person subjective personal pronoun is 'I'.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
The subjective pronoun in the sentence is 'one', an indefinite pronoun and the subject of the phrase 'one of them'. The pronoun 'them' is the object of the same phrase and the indirect object of the sentence.
My father sent me some flowers. Is the pronoun subjective or objective?
No, the pronoun 'who' is a subjective interrogative pronoun, and a subjective relative pronoun. The objective form is 'whom'. Examples:interrogative, subjective: Who is our math teacher?relative, subjective: Mr. Lincoln who is new will be our math teacher.interrogative, objective: To whom do I give my completed application form?relative, objective: The person to whom you give the application is the manager.
They is a third person, subjective, plural pronoun.
The first person plural, subjective pronoun is we; the first person singular, subjective pronoun is I.
The two personal pronouns that function as both subject and object in a sentence are: you and it.
A subjective case pronoun may not follow anything. A subjective case pronoun can start a sentence or fall somewhere within a sentence.Examples:George takes the train to work. He gets off at 19th Street. (the subjective pronoun 'he' starts the second sentence as the subject of that sentence)The train that he takes to work stops at 19th Street. (the subjective pronoun 'he' is the subject of the relative clause)
A pronoun in the subjective case functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, a subject complement (predicate nominative), or an object complement. A pronoun in the subjective case can also function as direct address (Hey you...) but can be considered impolite.
The pronoun in the objective case is me, a personal pronoun.I = personal pronoun, subjective casemine = possessive pronoun, takes the place of a noun in the subjective or objective casemy = possessive adjective, describes a subjective or objective noun