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When using a pronoun, it is important to have:a pronoun with the correct number (singular or plural);a pronoun with the correct gender (male, female, neuter);a pronoun in the correct case (subjective or objective);a pronoun in the correct person (first person, second person, third person)
To correct an ambiguous pronoun reference, you can:repeat the antecedentplace the pronoun nearer the antecedentrewrite the entire sentenceinsert an intensive pronoun after the ambiguous pronoun
The term "Just between you and I" is not a sentence. It is a prepositional phrase.The pronoun "I" is incorrect. The pronoun "I" is a subject pronoun uses as part of the compound object of the preposition.The pronoun "you" is correct. The pronoun "you" can function as a subject or an object in a sentence.The correct prepositional phrase is: Just between youand me...
The pronoun 'I' is the subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the object pronoun. The correct phrase is, "Just between you and me..."; because 'you and me' is the object of the preposition 'between'.
What the minister does, does matter. would be correct.
No, the correct grammar is "he and you." "Him" is used as an object pronoun, while "he" is used as a subject pronoun. So, the correct phrasing would be "he and you."
No, "am" is a conjugation of the verb "to be" that is used with the pronoun "I" in English. It is not correct to use "am" without the pronoun "I" in standard English grammar.
The correct pronoun for society is it.The correct pronouns for societies are they for a subject and them for the object of a verb or a preposition.
No, the phrase has a correct pronoun-antecedent agreement. The antecedent "presenters" is plural, and the pronoun "their" is also plural, matching correctly.
No, the term 'prime minister' is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:One prime minister was wearing a loud, flowered dress. She really needs some wardrobe help. (the personal pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun 'prime minister' as the subject of the second sentence)We had a prime minister who wore crazy ties? (the relative pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun 'prime minister' as the subject of the relative clause)There was a time when a prime minister wore striped trousers and a top hat. The attire reflected importance of his office. (the possessive adjective takes the place of the noun 'prime minister', describing the noun 'office')
The correct subject pronoun for "tu amigo y tu" is ustedes.
Yes, "who is watching whom" is grammatically correct. "Who" is the subject pronoun and "whom" is the object pronoun in this question.