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Cases of Pronouns

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15 views65 pages

Cases of Pronouns

Uploaded by

Caleb Ramos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CASES OF PRONOUNS

PRONOUN

A pronoun is a word that takes the


place of a noun (the name of a person,
place, thing, or idea).
Subjective Pronoun

The subjective/nominative case is needed


when a personal pronoun is used as
the subject of a verb.
Subject of a Sentence
The subject of a sentence is the person,
place, or thing that is performing the
action of the sentence. The subject
represents what or whom the sentence is
about.
Melai knows that Mela loves
chicken nuggets.
Stela and Mela love chicken nuggets.
Miguel decided to leave home early to
buy McDonald's Burger Cheese Dunk.
Hailey wants to visit Philippines next
month.
Hailey and Miguel love to listen
to Taylor Swift's songs.
Tarlac National Highschool is
the first public high school in
the Philippines.
Rovee is my bestfriend since
high school.
The new Team Leaders of
Winter Camp are Molly and
Junnie.
Me and my family went to
Gerry's Grill to celebrate my
birthday.
The newly hired assistant clerk
of the dean is her.
(Alliah)
She left him because he cheated.
SMEAG is where Lara works.
Terry was interrogated by the
policemen.
The policemen interrogated Terry.
The one who left the baggage at
the mall is me.
It is me who lost the book.
I am sorry about it.
Objective Pronoun
The objective case is used when the
pronoun is acting as the object of a
sentence (i.e., it is being acted upon by
the verb).
Object of a Sentence

Direct Object
a noun or pronoun answering "whom" or "what"
after an action verb. A direct object "receives" or is
the "object" of the action.
Tiktok made Benedict popular.
They caught Gabriel cheating
yesterday.
Object of a Sentence

Indirect Object
a noun or pronoun answering "to whom/what" or
"for whom/what" after an action verb. It is the
recepient of the direct object.
Len gave Philip a rose.
Emerson gave Sunny a guitar as a
present for her birthday.
Object of a Sentence

Object of a Preposition
a noun or pronoun answering "whom" or "what"
after a preposition in a prepositional phrase.
Object of a Sentence

What is a preposition?
A preposition is a word or group of words used
before a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase to show
direction, time, place, location, or to introduce
an object.
In fact, the boxes of milk are
donations from the Miss Kanlahi
2023 candidates.
Jenny watched the movie with
Serah.
Rod took Mila to dinner.
Daniela gave a present to Philip.
The ants get in your ears when you are
sleeping.
The kids want to sit next to the clown.
The Practice Teachers gave their
parents cakes and flowers on their
Pinning and Candle Lighting Ceremony.
I noticed that there is a
misunderstanding between Valerie and
Melvin.
Let's have a review!
Subjective and Objective Cases of Pronouns
Complete the Table
Complete the Table
Monica scolded Ross because he spilled
his coffee on the table.
My father sent Debbie and ___
(yourself) a card.
I like to ride with John and ___. (Beth)
I am going to spend my weekend with
the teachers and ____ (students).
The tenants and (their neighborhoods)
_____ got into a fight last week.
I wrote a letter for ____. (Kristine)
The people responsible for the crime are
_____ (Matt and Gab)
People who are as kind as (she, her)
shouldn't be taken advantage of.
Possessive Pronoun
Possessive case pronouns show
possession. Unlike nouns, possessive
pronouns do not use apostrophes to
show ownership.
Jun stole Philip's money.
The black bag with an avocado keychain
is Alliyah's.
Pronoun Determiner
MY, YOUR, HIS, HER, OUR, THEIR

Possessive Pronoun
MINE, YOURS, HIS, HERS, OURS, THEIRS
I think that is my handkerchief. It is very
similar to mine.
That's not their house. Theirs has got a
front door.
It was his fault, not hers.
Ma'am Catherine was my favorite
teacher when I was in high school.
The number you have saved is my
grandma's, not his.
:Is that John's car?
: No, it is my car.
Let's have a review!
Subjective and Objective Cases of Pronouns
Whose papers are these? Are these your
papers?
Those keys are my keys.
I am a coach of them. (Basketball
players')
A friend of her will go visit the shrine
soon.

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