Can someone please explain nominative case, objective case, and possessive case pronouns to me? I'm having trouble identifying them and keeping them straight. I'll give a medal :)
The nominative case pronouns are: I, you, he, she, they, we, who and it. The object pronouns are: me, you, him, her, them, us, whom and it. The possessive pronouns are: my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, their, theirs, our, ours, whose and its.
Thank you! Is there a way I can identify them without having to memorize all those words and keep them under the right case in my head?
Okay, thank you!
Oops, nominative cases can be singular or plural: I, we; you, you; she, they. Nominative cases are for pronoun used as subjects, Objective cases are pronouns used objects. Possessive cases indicate, no surprise, possession.
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