Pronoun Case
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Transcript Pronoun Case
Pronouns
Personal Pronoun Case
Case tells whether a pronoun shows possession or
acts as subject or object in the sentence
Writers use the following three terms:
Nominative Case (S, SC, DA, APP)
Objective Case (DO, IO, OP, APP)
Possessive Case (ADJ)
Nominative Case
Use the Nominative case when the pronoun is
either the subject or the subject complement of the
sentence. (You can also use it to replace direct addresses and
appositives.)
She gave her goldfish to the boy next door.
It was he who called me a bad name.
I, We, You, He, She, It , They
Use the Nominative Case
At the beginning of sentences. These are
probably subjects.
I/me hate grammar
After any form of the verb “to be” (is, was, will be)
These are subject compliments.
The one who ate the most pizza is he/him.
Objective Case
Use the objective case when the pronoun is an
object of the sentence. (DO, IO, OP, APP)
Arnold sent flowers to her. (Object of Preposition)
Betty phoned him tonight. (Direct Object)
Me, Us, You, Him, Her, It, Them
Use the Objective Case
After action verbs
Arnold bought (her, she) a new toaster. (IO)
After prepositions
Several of (us, we) girls are going to Cancun for our
holidays in March. (OP)
Possessive Case
Use possessive case pronouns to show ownership
Possessive case pronouns do not use an apostrophe
Example: The goldfish was ours, but Sam gave it to
his cat.
My, Mine, Your, Yours, His, Her, Hers, Its, Our, Ours,
Their, Theirs
Personal Pronoun Number
Number tells whether a pronoun is singular or plural.
Singular: I, you, he, she, it
me, you, him, her, it
my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, its
Plural: we, you, they
us, you, them
our, ours, your, yours, their, theirs
**Second person “you” can be both singular and plural – you must use context to figure
it out.
You were the winners of the game. (winners = plural you)
You were the first one to hand it in. (one = singular you)
Personal Pronoun Gender
Gender tells whether the pronoun is male,
female, neuter, or male/female.
Many times you must look at the pronoun’s
antecedent to help you.
He is good at his job (he = male)
I asked her to help me. (her = female, me = male/female)
It is a difficult question. (It = neuter)
Personal Pronoun Person
First person = speaker (I, we, me, us, my, mine, our, ours).
Second Person = spoken to (you, your, yours).
Third Person = spoken about (he, she, it, they, him, her,
them, his, her, hers, its, their, theirs)
Demonstrative Pronouns
Use demonstrative pronouns to point out
something.
This is my hammer. (singular, near)
That is her new car. (singular, far)
These are my new shoes. (plural, near)
Those are in a cage. (plural, far)
Using Compound Pronouns
There are two types of compound pronouns:
Reflexive & Intensive.
These pronouns end in “self” or “selves.”
Intensive pronouns will follow right behind their
antecedents. Mary herself answered the question.
Reflexive pronouns generally have a verb between
them and their antecedents. He kept looking at himself
in the mirror.
Distributive Pronouns
Either, Neither, Each, and Every
These pronouns are almost always singular
You can replace them with the pronoun “he” or “she.”
Either of the girls (give/gives) the best gifts.
Since Either is the subject (which is singular), you can replace it
with: “She” gives the best gifts. Remember to ignore prep. phrases.
Each of the members (want/wants) to win the game.
Since Each is the subject (which is singular), you can replace it
with: “He” wants to win the game. Remember to ignore prep. phrases.
Indefinite Pronouns
Singular ones end in “thing”, “body”, or “one.”
Ex: Someone, Everybody, Nothing, Anyone = Since these are
singular, you can replace them with the pronouns “he” or “she.”
Plural ones vary.
Ex: Many, Few, Several, All, More, etc. Since these are plural, you
can replace them with the pronoun “they.”
Everybody wants (his/their) team to win.
Since Everbody is the subject (which is singular), you can replace
it with: “He” wants his team to win.
Many of the players want (their/his) team to win.
Since Many is the subject (which is plural), you can replace it
with: “They” want their team to win.
Interrogative Pronouns
Who, Whom, Whose, Which, What
These pronouns ask a question.
Who is in the Nominative Case (Subj.)
Whom is in the Objective Case (DO, IO, OP).
**(Who/Whom) asked the question?
Who asked the question? Who is the subject. (She asked the question)
(Who/Whom) did you want to win?
Whom did you want to win? Whom is the DO. Notice that the verb did
win is split by the subject “you”. That means the pronoun in parenthesis must
be an object.
Relative Pronouns
Who, Whom, Whose, Which, That
These pronouns are the first word in an adverb clause.
They do not ask a question.
Who is in the Nominative Case (Subj.)
Whom is in the Objective Case (DO, IO, OP).
The girl (who/whom) sits in front of me is very tall.
Who sits in front of me is the correct adjective clause. Notice that the verb “sits”
follows right behind the relative pronoun. That means it is the subject of the clause.
The man (who/whom) I respect recently won an award.
Whom I respect is the correct adjective clause. Notice the verb “respect” has
the pronoun “I” between it and your relative pronoun. That means that “I” is the
subject, so you must chose the objective form “whom” for the clause.
Contractions vs. Pronouns
Possessive Pronouns do NOT have an apostrophe. (its)
Contractions do have apostrophes (it’s)
To understand which ones to use in the sentence, change your
contraction to two words.
(Your/You’re) team was the winner of the game.
“You are” team doesn’t make sense, so the correct answer is your (possessive).
(Its/It’s) time to leave now.
“It is” makes sense in the sentence, so that is the correct answer (contraction).
Avoiding Double Negatives
Forms of negatives are:
no, not, never, n’t.
If your sentence already has a negative form, then
you should chose a positive answer.
Don’t give me (nothing, anything) for a gift.
Don’t already is a negative, so you should chose the positive form
(anything).
The pilot could not find (nowhere, anywhere) to land.
Not already is a negative, so you should chose the positive form
(anywhere).
Pronouns Following THAN or AS
Pronouns following the words “than” or “as” usually take the same case as
their antecedent.
Susan is as tall as (me, I). You are comparing yourself to Susan, which is the
subject ; therefore, you should use the nominative form “I”.
Sometimes the meaning of the sentence tells you which is
correct.
My husband likes football more than I. (You are comparing yourself to
your husband which is the subject; therefore, you use the nominative case “I.”
My husband likes football more than me. (You are comparing yourself to
the game of football, which is the direct object; therefore, you use the objective
case “me.”