A subjective pronoun is used as the subject of a sentence in place of a person’s or thing’s name or description, particularly after the subject has already been introduced. Subject pronouns include: I, we, you, he, she, it, they
An objective pronoun is used in place of a person or thing that is acted upon or receives the action of the verb in a sentence. When the pronoun is the object of a prepositional phrase, it will always use an object pronoun. Object pronouns include: me, us, you, him, her, them
A possessive pronoun shows that something belongs to someone or something. Possessive pronouns include: mine, yours, ours, hers, his, their.
Pronoun Case
Subjective
I
You
He
She
It
We
They
Who
Possessive
Mine
Yours
His
Hers
Its
Ours
Theirs
Whose
Objective
Me
You
Him
Her
It
Us
Them
Whom
An objective pronoun is used in place of a person or thing that is acted upon or receives the action of the verb in a sentence. When the pronoun is the object of a prepositional phrase, it will always use an object pronoun. Object pronouns include: me, us, you, him, her, them
A possessive pronoun shows that something belongs to someone or something. Possessive pronouns include: mine, yours, ours, hers, his, their.
Pronoun Case
Subjective
I
You
He
She
It
We
They
Who
Possessive
Mine
Yours
His
Hers
Its
Ours
Theirs
Whose
Objective
Me
You
Him
Her
It
Us
Them
Whom
pronouns_object_subject_possessive_one.docx |
pronouns_object_subject_possessive_two.docx |
pronouns_object_subject_possessive_three.docx |