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Anon, perhaps you mean pronouns?
Nominative: HE loves her.
Objective: She loves HIM
Possessive: She is the object of HIS affections.
Next time, it would be better if you started a new thread when you have a question, rather than just
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"It won't be he who gets fired" is correct.
In English we have only three cases: nominative, objective, and genitive (possessive). All subjects and subject complements are in the nominative case and all objects are in the objective case. (The
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alt.usage.english
by
rip rock
5 yr 52 days ago
Articles, Dialects, Whom, Prepositions, Nouns, Possessives, Clauses, Nominative, Writing, Students, Genitives, Accusative, Indirect, Objects
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Who, whom and whose are relative pronouns. Who and whom are used for persons. They introduce relative clauses postmodifying the head of a noun phrase, and they are identical in form with interrogative pronouns but function differently.
Who:
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While it was 30/9/03 10:50 pm throughout the UK, Mike Oliver sprinkled little black dots on a white screen, and they fell thus: You're thinking of a "predicate adjective". It seems a little ... a predicate nominative by whether or
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