In English, the pronoun cases are subjective, objective, an possessive.
Subjective pronouns are used only for the subject of a sentences or phrase.
Some subjective pronouns are I, we, he, she, and they.
Objective pronouns are pronouns that are used only for the object of a sentence or phrase.
Some objective pronouns are me, us, him, her, and them.
Some pronouns can be used as the subject or the object of a sentence or phrase.
Those pronouns are you and it.
Possessive pronouns show that something in the sentence belongs to it.
Possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs, and everybody's
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"Me" is in the first person, singular, objective case.
The pronoun "them" is an objective case pronoun. It functions as the object of a verb or a preposition in a sentence.
"Whomever" is the objective case of the "universal" relative pronoun "whoever".
No, the personal pronoun 'they' is a subjective pronoun; a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The corresponding objective personal pronoun is them, a word that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:My friends and I are going swimming. They will pick me up. (subjective)I chose two kittens from the litter. I call them Jack and Jill. (objective)
The pronoun them is the third person, plural, objective case. Example sentence:Our team won the championship and a trophy was presented to them.
In order to deliberately misuse an objective case pronoun as a subjective case pronoun you would have to know which was which.The objective case pronouns are: me, him, her, us, them, and whom.All other pronouns can be either objective or subjective, including you and it.To misuse the six objective case pronouns, make them the subject of a sentence or a clause.
"Me" is in the first person, singular, objective case.
YES
No. The word "me" is a pronoun, the objective case of the pronoun "I."
A pronoun in the objective case is a pronoun that functions as the object of a verb or apreposition.The objective pronouns are: me, us, you, him, her, it, them, and whom.Object of the verb: The winner is you.Object of the proposition: Mom gave the book to me.
The pronoun "them" is an objective case pronoun. It functions as the object of a verb or a preposition in a sentence.
The pronoun in the objective case is me, a personal pronoun.I = personal pronoun, subjective casemine = possessive pronoun, takes the place of a noun in the subjective or objective casemy = possessive adjective, describes a subjective or objective noun
No, it is a pronoun. It is the first-person singular pronoun, objective case.
"He" cannot be a direct object because it's a subjective case pronoun, which means that it is the subject of the verb. The pronoun would need to be in the objective case to be a direct object. "Him" is an objective case pronoun.
Subjective or objective.
'I' is the subjective case, 'me' is the objective case, - and 'my' is the possessivecase.Here is an example sentence of four clauses. In each clause the subjective case pronoun is used first and the underlined objective case pronoun is used last:-"I wrote to her, she wrote to them, they wrote to him, and he wrote to me."
"Whomever" is the objective case of the "universal" relative pronoun "whoever".