If Carmen is a female, the subject pronoun to take the place of the name is she.
If Carmen is a male, the subject pronoun to take the place of the name is he.
My sister Carmen is joining us, she should be here at two.
My brother Carmen is picking us up, he will be here at two.
Yes. The subject pronoun is "he". You cannot use the object pronoun "him" as a subject. Example : "He knew that people did not trust him."
The subjective pronoun that takes the place of a singular noun for a female is: sheExample: Maria will pick us up. She will be here at six.
The personal pronoun 'it' functions as a subject and an object pronoun.Examples:Mary brought home a new puppy. It is very cute but she didn't give it a name yet.The first use of the pronoun 'it' is the subject of the verb 'is'.The second use of the pronoun 'it' is the direct object of the verb 'give'.
The word 'she' is a subject pronoun. It is not difficult to work that out: just use the word in a pair of simple sentences, once as a subject and once as an object, and see which sounds right. 'She loves David.' 'David loves she.' The first sentence is right, the second is wrong. It would have to be 'David loves her.' 'Her' is the object pronoun.
Him. The reason is that "he" is a subject pronoun. Since your masculine pronoun is not acting as the subject of the sentence, you would not use "he".Here is the difference in the same sentence:He and I had dinner with Susan. (Here, "He" is one of the subjects.)I had dinner with Susan and him. (Here, only "I" am doing the action, so I am the only subject.)
él
Ella
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun Maria is she as a subject and her as an object. Examples:Maria is joining us. She will be here at two. You will finally get to meet her.
The subject I is the pronoun. The pronoun I takes the place of the noun that is the name of the person speaking, the first person, singular, subjective pronoun.
The word 'we' IS a subject pronoun; the first person, plural, personal pronoun that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Example: We saw the dog
The word 'who' is a subject pronoun; the word 'whom' is an object pronoun. In your sentence, you need the subject pronoun because the pronoun is the subject of the relative clause 'who raise families'.
"Somos" is first person plural, or "we". You would use "nosotros" with it.
The subject pronoun used when talking about a boy and a boy in Spanish is "ellos".
A reflexive pronoun is a restatement of the noun antecedent. The antecedent may or may not be the subject of the sentence. If the antecedent is not the subject of the sentence, then the reflexive pronoun would not be the same as the subject. Examples: For a subject antecedent: She made that dress herself. For another antecedent: This dress, made by Mary herself, won first prize. (the subject is 'dress'; Mary is the antecedent for the reflexive pronoun)
Yes, the pronoun 'that' is a relative pronoun used to introduce a relative clause.The pronoun 'they' is a subject pronoun which can functions as the subject of a relative clause.Example: The twins share a car that they purchased together.
Their is a possessive pronoun, the third person plural. The pronoun their can be use as the subject or the object of a sentence.
Yes. The subject pronoun is "he". You cannot use the object pronoun "him" as a subject. Example : "He knew that people did not trust him."