Personal pronouns
- Forms
- Subject pronouns
- Predicate pronouns
- Order of pronouns
Here are the different forms for personal pronouns in English:
Subject pronouns reflect the nouns they replace. Since English nouns rarely show gender, the pronouns "he" and "she" are generally used only for people or animals; in the case of objects or impersonal expressions, the pronoun "it" will be used.
Examples:
- She wants to eat.
- You look tired.
- It is hard to cook well.
Predicate pronouns will always have the same form whether they are used as direct, indirect, or prepositional objects. The forms are: "me", "you", "it", "him", "her", "us", "them."
Whatever the form of the sentence (affirmative, negative, interrogative), direct objects -- or the pronouns replacing them -- will follow the verb:
- Did you buy it?
- You didn't buy it.
- You bought it.
Prepositional objects will come after their preposition:
- Will you come to the store with me?
- He left without her.
Indirect objects will generally come after the proposition "to," except if the pronoun precedes the direct object, in which cas the proposition "to" disappears:
- I have spoken to her.
- I gave this present to them.
- BUT : I gave them this present.
When a verb is followed by two or more pronouns, the following sequence is observed
Examples :
- Don't tell that to him.
- He couldn't sell the car to them.
Exception: As noted above, one may omit the preposition "to" in front of an indirect object, in which cas the indirect object pronoun precedes the direct object:
- He gave me it for Christmas.
- Don't tell him that.
- He couldn't sell them the car.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario