The correct noun clause in this sentence is "whoever needs it" which is functioning as the indirect object of the verb "will loan".
Please note that the pronoun "whoever" is the subject of the noun clause and should be the subjective case.
The pronoun "whomever" an objective pronoun.
The correct indirect object in the sentence is "whoeverneeds it", a noun clause.The correct pronoun is "whoever" because the entire noun clause is the indirect object of the sentence, the pronoun "whoever" is the subject of the noun clause.The pronoun "whomever" is an object pronoun.
In the sentence "Mrs. Smith will loan whomever needs it money for lunch," there are three nouns: "Mrs. Smith," "money," and "lunch"; there are two pronouns: "whomever" and "it." The "whomever" should be changed slightly to "whoever," since "whoever" is the subject of the clause "whoever needs it." It is true, certainly, that "whoever needs it" functions as the object of the verb "will loan" and, thus, of the entire sentence; nevertheless the object case marker "-m" need not be added to the word "whoever." (This question perplexed me and my grammar-conscientious 8th-grade history teacher, but I've since figured it out.) If that's not what the question was about, I'm not sure I understand it. If you want to collapse "whoever needs it" into one noun, I suppose you could look for one noun to do that, but it's not necessary.
The direct object of the verb "will loan" is "money" (the complete direct object is the noun phrase "money for lunch").The indirect object is the noun clause "whomever needs it". However, the pronoun "whomever" is incorrect. Although the noun clause is functioning as an indirect object of the verb, the pronoun is the subject of the clause.The noun clause should read, "whoever needs it".
The word him is the pronoun in the sentence.
BUY... cmon dude its not that hard
It was his lunch money Posted by Jenna Sirucek
There was a skirmish at my school yesterday because a bully stole my friends lunch money.
The bully looked at me with a sinister intent; I just knew he was coming after my lunch money.
He was afraid the big bully would pummel him to the ground if he didn't surrender his lunch money.
indirect object
Lunch Money was published in 2005.
The pronoun in the sentence is his, a possessive adjective.The antecedent of the pronoun 'his' is the noun Raja.