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Abortion: Why Should Abortion Be Legal?

  “No woman can call herself free who does not control her own body, the emphasis must be not on the right to abortion but on the right to p...

martes, 12 de mayo de 2020

PERSONAL PRONOUNS

personal pronoun is a short word we use as a simple substitute for the proper name of a person. Each of the English personal pronouns shows us the grammatical person, gender, number, and case of the noun it replaces. I, you, he, she, it, we they, me, him, her, us, and them are all personal pronouns.
Personal pronouns are the stunt doubles of grammar; they stand in for the people (and perhaps animals) who star in our sentences. They allow us to speak and write with economy because they enable us to avoid repeating cumbersome proper nouns all the live-long day.

First-, Second-, and Third-Person Pronouns

A personal pronoun can be in one of three “persons.” A first-person pronoun refers to the speaker, a second-person pronoun refers to the person being spoken to, and a third-person pronoun refers to the person being spoken of. For each of these three grammatical persons, there is a plural as well.

Subject and Object Pronouns

Personal pronouns can be either subjects or objects in a sentence. Subject pronouns are said to be in the nominative case, whereas object pronouns are said to be in the objective case.
PersonNominativeObjective
First singularIme
Second singularyouyou
Third singularhe, she, ithim, her, it
First pluralweus
Second pluralyouyou
Third pluraltheythem
The interrogative pronouns for all three persons are the same: who (nominative) and whom (objective). 

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