Subjective and Objective Pronoun, Possessive Adjective

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The grammatical rules for subjective and objective pronouns, and possessive adjectives are based on their function within a sentence.

1. Subjective Pronouns (Nominative Case)

Subjective pronouns act as the subject of a verb or a subject complement (following a linking verb like is, are, was, were, seem, become).

Singular Plural
I We
You You
He, She, It They

 

Key Rules:

  • As the Subject: The pronoun performs the action.
    • Example: She read the entire book.
  • As a Subject Complement: The pronoun renames or refers back to the subject after a linking verb.
    • Example: The winner was he. (This is more formal; in casual speech, “It was him” is common, but grammatically “It was I/he/she/they” is correct).
  • In Compounds: When the subject is a compound (e.g., noun and pronoun), use the subjective form. A good test is to remove the other part of the subject.
    • Example: My friend and I went to the store. (Test: “I went to the store” is correct, not “Me went to the store”).

2. Objective Pronouns (Accusative Case)

Objective pronouns act as the object of a verb or the object of a preposition.

Singular Plural
Me Us
You You
Him, Her, It Them

 

Key Rules:

  • As the Direct or Indirect Object of a Verb: The pronoun receives the action.
    • Example (Direct Object): The dog followed him.
    • Example (Indirect Object): She handed me the keys.
  • As the Object of a Preposition: The pronoun follows a preposition (to, for, with, between, like, except, but (when used as a preposition), etc.).
    • Example: The gift is for her.
    • Example: Between you and me, the project is failing. (Not “you and I”).
  • In Compounds: When the object is a compound, use the objective form.
    • Example: The manager thanked Sarah and them. (Test: “The manager thanked them” is correct, not “The manager thanked they”).

3. Possessive Adjectives (Possessive Determiners)

Possessive adjectives function as adjectives by modifying a noun to show ownership or possession. They always come before a noun.

Singular Plural
My Our
Your Your
His, Her, Its Their

 

Key Rules:

  • Always Modify a Noun: They must be followed by a noun.
    • Example: This is my car.
    • Example: Their house is on the corner.
  • Distinction from Possessive Pronouns: Possessive adjectives (like my) are different from possessive pronouns (like mine), which stand alone and replace a noun phrase.
    • Possessive Adjective: This is her desk.
    • Possessive Pronoun: The desk is hers.
  • Its vs. It’s: The possessive adjective is its (no apostrophe). It’s is a contraction for it is or it has.
    • Example: The cat chased its tail.
    • Example: It’s a beautiful day.

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