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.
The objective pronoun for the first person singular 'I' is 'me'; for example, This belongs to me.
The objective from for the first person pronoun 'I' is me. The pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.Example: When I saw the posting for this job and Iknew it was right for me.
The objective pronoun in a sentence receives the action of the verb. A noun phrase or clause can tell what the objective pronoun does. Examples:I saw the posting for this job and I knew it was right for me. (the objective pronoun 'it' is the object of the verb 'knew'; the objective pronoun 'me' is the object of the preposition 'for')
The corresponding objective first person pronoun is me.My mom loves me.
The pronoun for Blanca is she (subjective) and her (objective).
"Whomever" is an objective pronoun, used when the pronoun is the object of a verb or preposition in a sentence.
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
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
An objective pronoun follows a verb 'to be'.The objective personal pronouns are: me, us, you, him, her, it, them.
An objective personal pronoun follows a preposition. The objective pronouns are: are me, us, him, her, you, it, and them.
A pronoun in the objective case is a pronoun that functions as the object of a verb or apreposition.The objective pronouns are: me, us, you, him, her, it, them, and whom.Object of the verb: The winner is you.Object of the proposition: Mom gave the book to me.
No. The word "me" is a pronoun, the objective case of the pronoun "I."