The third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun is them.
Example: They came to visit and brought the baby with them. (object of the preposition 'with')
The plural form of the subjective, personal pronoun "I" is we.The corresponding objective personal pronoun is "me".The corresponding plural form is us.
The plural form of the objective personal pronoun 'her' is them.examples:Our new neighbor is Jane Smith. Have you met her?Our new neighbors are the Smiths. Have you met them?The plural form of the possessive adjective 'her' is their.examples:Jane left her bicycle in the driveway.The kids left their bicycles in the driveway.
Yes, the personal pronoun them is the third person, the people or things spoken about.The pronoun them is the plural, objective pronoun; the corresponding subjective plural form is they. Example:They are beautiful shoes but I can't afford them.
A noun or pronoun in the objective case is a word that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:noun: We likewine afterdinner. (wine is the object of the verb 'like'; dinner is the object of the preposition 'after')pronoun: John saw herat the mall with them. (her is the object of the verb 'saw'; them is the object of the preposition 'with')
The objective first person, plural pronoun is us. Example sentence:We went to the mall with John, then Jane picked usup.
The plural form for the pronoun 'she' is they (subjective) and them (objective); the plural possessive form is 'theirs'. A possessive pronoun takes the place of the noun that belongs to someone or something. Example sentence:The Collins sisters bought a house on my street. The house with the moving van must be theirs.
The pronoun 'them' is the objective form of the pronoun 'they'.The pronouns 'they' and 'them' are the third person, plural, personal pronouns.The pronoun 'them' functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example: The Walters came to visit and theybrought the baby with them. (object of the preposition 'with')
The personal pronouns I and it are singular only. The personal pronoun you is both singular and plural.The first person pronoun I is the subjective, the objective is me.The third person pronoun it is the subjective and the objective.The plural form for the subjective I is we; the plural form for the objective me is us.The plural form for the subjective it is they; the plural form for the objective it is them.The second person pronoun you is both singular and plural, both subjective and objective. Old English once used a different form for number and case:Nominative singular: ThouNominative plural: YeObjective singular: TheeObjective plural: YouBut, over the centuries, the form 'you' became used for all of these functions.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun 'this' is these.
The plural form for the personal pronoun 'I' is we.
The plural form of the first person, subjective pronoun 'I' is we.
No, the personal pronoun 'them' is an objective pronoun that takes the place of a plural noun (or two or more nouns) as the object of a verb or a preposition.The corresponding plural, nominative pronoun is 'they'.Examples:I will give them a call to see if theycan come.The pronoun 'them' is the direct object of the verb 'will give'.The pronoun 'they' is the subject of the second part of the compound sentence.