Grammatical forms refer to variations of a word based on its function in a sentence. Nominative form is used for subjects, objective for objects, and possessive to show ownership or relationship. These forms help indicate the role of words within a sentence.
The phrase "you ran to the post office" is not nominative, reflexive, or possessive. It is a simple past tense sentence describing an action (running to the post office) performed by the subject "you."
Martial Arts
I, it, she, he, you ( replaces thou in modern usage)
The grammatical forms of "eat" are: Base form: eat Present participle: eating Past tense: ate Past participle: eaten
No, the word 'we' is a personal pronoun, the first person plural subjective form; the objective form is 'us'. Example:We want you to come with us.The possessive forms are:the possessive pronoun 'ours', takes the place of a noun that belongs to us.the possessive adjective 'our', describes a noun that belongs to us; the possessive adjective is place just before the noun it describes.The yellow house on the corner is ours.Our house is the yellow one on the corner.
The pronouns that are the same for the subjective and objective are: you and it.
The phrase "you ran to the post office" is not nominative, reflexive, or possessive. It is a simple past tense sentence describing an action (running to the post office) performed by the subject "you."
My is the English equivalent of 'meus'. The possessive adjective is in the masculine nominative singular. The feminine and neuter forms are 'mea' and 'meum', respectively. 'Meus' can mean 'my' ('Os meus filhos' = 'My sons' or 'My kids'), or it can also mean 'mine' (Estes sapatos são meus' = 'These shoes are mine'), it always depends on how you use the adjective. My = meu, masculine nominative singular. My = minha, feminine nominative singular. My = meus, masculine nominative plural. My = minhas, feminine nominative plural.
Martial Arts
The personal pronoun 'her' is the singular objective form. The possessive forms are the possessive pronoun hersand the possessive adjective her.A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to a female. Example:The house on the corner is hers.A possessive adjective is placed in front of a noun to describe that noun as belonging to a female. Example:Her house is on the corner.
Nominative Case The nominative case is the form of a noun or pronoun used in the subject or predicate nominative. In English this is significant only with personal pronouns and the forms of who. Personal pronouns in the nominative case in modern English are I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. The word who is also in the nominative case.
Parallelism
I, it, she, he, you ( replaces thou in modern usage)
The grammatical forms of "eat" are: Base form: eat Present participle: eating Past tense: ate Past participle: eaten
The possessive forms are Milli's and Robert's.
The possessive form is: mother's advice.
The singular possessive form is bureau's. The plural forms are bureaus or bureaux (both are accepted). The plural possessive forms are bureaus' or bureaux's. (they are pronounced the same, the x is silent)