In the sentence "I ate an apple" the subject is I, the action or predicate is ate, and apple is the object, modified by the adjective an. you suck
The pronoun them is the third person, plural, objective case. Example sentence:Our team won the championship and a trophy was presented to them.
'I' is the subjective case, 'me' is the objective case, - and 'my' is the possessivecase.Here is an example sentence of four clauses. In each clause the subjective case pronoun is used first and the underlined objective case pronoun is used last:-"I wrote to her, she wrote to them, they wrote to him, and he wrote to me."
That would be described as the objective case. An example would be: I am talking to your sisters and you.
In order to deliberately misuse an objective case pronoun as a subjective case pronoun you would have to know which was which.The objective case pronouns are: me, him, her, us, them, and whom.All other pronouns can be either objective or subjective, including you and it.To misuse the six objective case pronouns, make them the subject of a sentence or a clause.
An objective is a noun, but you can use objective as an adjective, in which case the superlative is - the most objective.
The pronoun "me" is in the objective case. It is used as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Pronouns in the objective case are used as the object of a verb or the object of a preposition. The objective case pronouns are: me, us, you, him, her, it, and them.Examples:We saw him at the movie. (the pronoun 'him' is the object of the verb 'saw')She gave the books to them. (the pronoun 'them' is the object of the preposition 'to')
Example: "She was caught running with scissors."The preposition, with, is an objective preposition.Why?Because the verb running has an object, with scissors. The object of a verb is something the verb acts on, or points to. The preposition with is part of the object in the above example.Another example: "They took turns stepping in puddles on the way home."In this example, in is the objective preposition, because it links puddles with the verb stepping. Where did they step? They stepped in puddles.
Pronouns in the objective case; they are her, him, me, them, us, it, and you. Whom can be an objective pronoun as well.
The pronouns in the nominative case you would use: he, she, it, they The pronouns in the Objective case: him, her, it, them, The pronouns in the Possessive case: his,her, hers, it, their, theirs
YES
The pronoun HIM is the OBJECTIVE CASE, functioning as the object of the preposition 'to'. The corresponding nominative case is: he. The corresponding possessive case is: his.