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Possessive Pronouns - mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs show that something belongs to someone. Note that the possessive pronouns are similar to possessive adjectives (my, his, her). The difference is that the object follows the possessive adjective but does not follow the possessive pronoun.
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A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for subject, object, or possessive cases. ... To decide whether to use the subject or object pronoun after the words than or as, mentally complete the sentence.
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Objective pronoun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An objective pronoun in grammar functions as the target of a verb, as distinguished from a subjective pronoun, which is the initiator of a verb. Objective pronouns are instances of the oblique case....
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objective_pronoun |
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Definition of object pronoun with German, Dutch, French, Italian, and Spanish translations and search. Pronunciation sound files. ... (grammar) A pronoun that is used as the object of a sentence, such as "me", "him" or "us" in English.
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Choose the correct answer. ... Basic English Structure...
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The objective personal pronoun "her" is the direct object of the verb "forced" and the objective personal pronoun "him" is the object of the preposition "with."
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