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4 Using Pronouns Nominative Case (I, You, he, she, it, we, you, they, who): use when the pronoun is the subject of a verb (even if it comes after the verb.

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Presentation on theme: "4 Using Pronouns Nominative Case (I, You, he, she, it, we, you, they, who): use when the pronoun is the subject of a verb (even if it comes after the verb."— Presentation transcript:

1 4 Using Pronouns Nominative Case (I, You, he, she, it, we, you, they, who): use when the pronoun is the subject of a verb (even if it comes after the verb or replaces the subject) ex. “The only students who auditioned were he and Carlos.” “This is she.”

2 4 Using Pronouns Objective Case (me, you, him, her, it, us, you, them, whom): Use when the pronoun is the direct object, indirect object, or the object of a preposition ex. “Who is that beside her?” “Virgil helped him.”

3 4 Using Pronouns Possessive Case (my, mine, your, his, hers, its, ours, their): Use the possessive case before a gerund Ex. “I was impressed by her being in the top ten.” “She was happy about his shaving his beard.”

4 Ex. I see myself playing marimbas
4 Using Pronouns Reflexive pronouns (myself, himself, etc.): Use the reflexive case as when it is both the subject and the object or to add emphasis Ex. I see myself playing marimbas He is going to treat himself to ice cream I myself saw the murder. She caught the killer herself.


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