A word or phrase to which a pronoun refers in a sentence. For example: People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. (Peopleis the antecedent of who.) ... A word used in place of a noun, like I, me, he, him, you, it etc.. See also compound pronoun, personal pronoun, possessive pronoun.
www.learnenglish.de/Level1/TechnicalTerms.htm
Any pronoun in a compound object MUST BE OBJECT PRONOUNS! ... Use SUBJECT pronouns in compound SUBJECTS. Use OBJECT pronouns in compound OBJECTS . ...
www.slideshare.net/kathycampbell/compound-pronouns-1323... www.slideshare.net/kathycampbell/compound-pronouns-1323250
So why do the same people, who use "me" correctly when it stands alone, say things like this when it is in a compound phrase: ... The choice of "I" or "me" in English depends on the same rule as the choice of "he/him" and "she/her," the rule that determines the function of the pronoun in sentences. In the Subject...
www.alphadictionary.com/articles/drgw002.html
Pronoun Case is really a very simple matter. There are three cases. ... 1. In compound structures, where there are two pronouns or a noun and a pronoun, drop the other noun for a moment. Then you can see which case you want.
owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/595/02/
Dear Colleagues, some weeks ago I launched a query on the net, asking for bibliographic data about compound nouns. Reactions came at such speed and in such quantities, that we were really overwhelmed. My colleague Lieve De Wachter and I want to thank all that have reacted ... Sum: Compound nouns, Pronoun borrowing, Flaming...
www.linguistlist.org/issues/2/2-362.html
An objective personal pronoun indicates that the pronoun is acting as an object of a verb, compound verb, preposition, or infinitive phrase. The objective personal pronouns are: "me," "you," "her," "him," "it," "us," "you," ... Here the objective personal pronoun "us" is the direct object of the compound verb "will meet."
www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/writcent/hypergrammar/pron... www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/writcent/hypergrammar/pronouns.html
Unlike a pronoun, a common noun can occur freely with a determiner (compare the book with *the she), and unlike a proper noun, it must combine with a determiner if it is singular and countable (compare ... A compound pronoun is made up (at least historically) of a determiner plus one of the nouns BODY, ONE, THING or WHERE:
www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/enc/words.htm
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 ... Overheard: Infixation of a Compound Relative Pronoun ... Professor overheard by Kent Hendricks:
www.calvin.edu/weblogs/language/infixation_of_a_compoun... www.calvin.edu/weblogs/language/infixation_of_a_compound_relative_pronoun/
Overheard: Infixation of a Compound Relative Pronoun ... Professor overheard by Kent Hendricks: ... This is the most interesting form of infixation I have ever observed. This sentence refutes almost everything that was written about English morphology in the 1980s; I’m not sure about the 90s because most morphology from the...
www.calvin.edu/weblogs/language/comments/infixation_of_... www.calvin.edu/weblogs/language/comments/infixation_of_a_compound_relative_pronoun/
When one of the possessors in a compound possessive is a personal pronoun, we have to put both possessors in the possessive form or we end up with something silly: “Bill and my car had to be towed last night.”...
writingtips.wordpress.com/2008/10/30/compound-possessiv... writingtips.wordpress.com/2008/10/30/compound-possessive-noun-pronoun/
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