think
Andrew Moffitt can kick a ball at 120mph.
John:Nominative (subject): John kicked the ball.Accusative (object): Harold kicked John.Vocative: "John, please give me the ball."Genitive: Harold kicked John's ball. [In some situations, you might use the form "the ball of John"; e.g. "the yolk of the egg".]Dative: Harold gave the ball to John.Ablative: The window was broken by John.In English, some of these forms are made using combinations of words (as you can see from the above examples).As for "I" and "me":Nominative (subject): I kicked the ball.Accusative (object): Harold kicked me.Vocative: "Hey, you… please kick the ball." ["Hey" is a word/sound to get someone's attention. Normally, you would use the person's name.]Genitive: It is my ball. [Also: "The ball is mine."]Dative: Harold gave the ball to me.Ablative: The window was broken by me.The word "me" is used for any form with a preposition - "to me", "for me", "with me", etc. . (I can not think of any proper examples in which you would say, "of me"; you would always say "my" or "mine".)
John:Nominative (subject): John kicked the ball.Accusative (object): Harold kicked John.Vocative: "John, please give me the ball."Genitive: Harold kicked John's ball. [In some situations, you might use the form "the ball of John"; e.g. "the yolk of the egg".]Dative: Harold gave the ball to John.Ablative: The window was broken by John.In English, some of these forms are made using combinations of words (as you can see from the above examples).As for "I" and "me":Nominative (subject): I kicked the ball.Accusative (object): Harold kicked me.Vocative: "Hey, you… please kick the ball." ["Hey" is a word/sound to get someone's attention. Normally, you would use the person's name.]Genitive: It is my ball. [Also: "The ball is mine."]Dative: Harold gave the ball to me.Ablative: The window was broken by me.The word "me" is used for any form with a preposition - "to me", "for me", "with me", etc. . (I can not think of any proper examples in which you would say, "of me"; you would always say "my" or "mine".)
Neil Armstrong was the first person to walk on the moon.
it is not a ball it is a discus the statue is called discablo
we
the second person to land on the moon was Buzz Aldrin
The first person ever to set foot on the moon was a man named Neil Armstrong.
Because it is the name of a thing (sport) it does not show an action or a state. We don't say: He soccered the ball, ( action - He kicked the ball) or: I soccer you, (state - I love you).
Running onto the field. Interfering with a ball that is in play (reaching over the railing to field a fair ball grounded down the first/third base line or reaching over the railing to field fly ball). Start a fight with another fan. Scream profane language at another fan or player.
aldrin
yes there was his name was neil armstorng