It means to complete something together
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.
pancakes
The function of subjective complements is to follow the linking verb with a predictive expression. It also works to complement the subject of the sentence.
A subject complement follows a linking verb and renames or describes the subject. A subject complement can be a noun or an adjective.Sarah Silverman is a comedian.Here, comedian renames Sarah Silverman, so comedian is the subject complement.
There is a group of intransitive verbs which needs a complement to convey a complete idea. This complement is called the SUBJECTIVE COMPLEMENT. The SUBJECTIVE COMPLEMENT tell us about the subject, its characteristics, another name for it, another way to referring to it. The SUBJECTIVE COMPLEMENT can be a noun, noun equivalent or adjectival I V I P: -He BECAME a respectable attorney - We FELT a bit confused - She TURNED pale
qwek qwak ... add me sa ym abizhal13 :]] IMPROVED ANSWER : hmm..Barack Obama is the President of the United States of America. Barack Obama is the subject IS is the linking verb and PRESIDENT is the subjective complement like saying barack obama = president
The appropriate pronoun is 'he'. In the sentence the pronoun he, takes the place of the noun 'teacher' as the subject complement following the linking verb 'will be'. A pronoun functioning as a subject complement (predicate nominative) is always a nominative (subjective) form.
A noun that renames the subject is a subjectcomplement, phrase or clause that follows a linking verb. Example:Robert is my cousin.
Claudia was a good detective. (detective name Claudia)
A subjective case pronoun functions as:the subject of a sentence;the subject of a clause;a subject complement (also called a predicate nominative).EXAMPLESWhen George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'George' as the subject of the second part of the compound sentence)The flowers that she bought for mother are lilacs. (the pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun for the person spoken about as the subject of the relative clause)The person who does clean-up is I. (the pronoun 'I' takes the place of the noun for the person speaking as the subject complement)
When someone calls on the phone and asks "Is Greg there?", I may answer "This is he." The "he" in that example is a subject complement (note "complement" spelled with "e" after "l", not "i"). "Complement" is a grammatical term for a word or phrase that completes some phrase (and complements the head of that phrase). In the preceding example, "he" completes the verb phrase, or predicate, "is he". "He" refers to the subject "this" and is also the subject form of the pronoun (as against the object form "him"), so I guess that's why it's called a "subject" complement, though, I admit, this part of the terminology is not completely clear to me. It might also make sense to call that "he" a "subjective complement of be".
The subject is the noun or pronoun that is doing or being something in the sentence. Examples: Mary walks five miles to work each day. "Mary" is the subject; "walks" is the verb. She is very athletic. "She" is the subject; "is" is a linking verb connecting the subject to the subject complement.