Pronoun
Issues Pronoun Agreement—a pronoun must agree with its antecedent in gender (male/female/neuter) and number (singular/plural). INDEFINITE PRONOUNS (Always Singular) Anyone Someone Everyone No one Each Anything Something Everything Nothing Either Anybody Somebody Everybody Nobody Neither Pronoun Reference—it must be clear to what word a pronoun refers—every pronoun must have a clear antecedent. SUBJECT Pronouns OBJECT Pronouns I Me She
Her He Him We Us They Them Who
Whom Whoever Whomever Note: “It” and “You” belong to both groups USE SUBJECT PRONOUNS in the following cases: ü In compound subjects (“Ted and I (rather than me) are going to attend.”) ü Before and AFTER the forms of the verb TO BE (am, is, are, was, were, has been, have been). ü
After
the words than and as USE OBJECT PRONOUNS in the following cases: ü After prepositions (object of the preposition) (I gave the book to Ted and him (rather than he) This is between you and me (me rather than I because between is a preposition and you and me are its objects) ü As objects of verbs Commonly
Used Prepositions
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