The subject of the sentence is the noun'cooks'.
The subject pronoun 'I' is used incorrectly as the direct object of the verb 'were'.
"The cook was me."
"The cooks were Tim and me." (direct object of the verb, use the objective form)
"Time and I were the cooks." (subject of the sentence, use the subjective form)
Tim Hemlin has written: 'People in Glass Houses (Culinary Mysteries' -- subject(s): Cooks, Political candidates, Fiction
Assuming that Tim is a male, the personal pronouns he (as a subject) and him (as an object) are used. Examples:Tim is my brother. He is away at college right now. I miss him a lot.
subject pronoun
Subject pronoun - I, You, He, We, She, They, It, you ( plural) Object pronoun - Me, You, Her, Him, Us, The, It
A subject pronoun is a pronoun that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Examples:Mary has twins. They are twelve years old.The pronoun 'they' is the subject of the second sentence.John got an A on the essay that he wrote.The pronoun 'he' is the subject of the relative clause.What did she say?The pronoun 'she' is the subject of the sentence (she did say what).
The pronoun 'he' is the subject pronoun in "Is he ready to go?" (he is ready).
The subject pronoun of "they" is "they". It is used to refer to a group of people or things as the subject of a sentence.
The pronoun 'anyone' is an indefinite pronoun, a word for an unknown or unnamed number of people.
A subject pronoun functions as the subject of a sentence or the subject of a clause. Examples:They came for dinner.We had the wine they brought.
Yes, a pronoun can be a simple subject in a sentence. A simple subject is the main noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, and it can be a pronoun like "he," "she," "it," or "they."
The pronoun for a letter is it (subject or object); the pronoun for the letters of the alphabet is they (subject) or them (object).
There is no pronoun used as an object. The pronoun 'you' is used twice in the sentence. The pronoun 'you' can be a subject or an object pronoun. The first 'you' is the subject pronoun, the subject of the sentence. The second 'you' is the subject of the noun clause 'what you expected to see'; the clause is the object of the sentence but the word you is the subject of that clause.