Newbetuts
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New posts in grammatical-case
"Us Americans" or "We Americans"?
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
appositives
Is "Me neither" incorrect?
grammaticality
pronouns
syntactic-analysis
ellipsis
grammatical-case
Should a photograph label read “you and I” or “you and me”? [duplicate]
word-choice
grammaticality
grammar
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
Thank thou or Thank thee
politeness
grammatical-case
early-modern-english
shakespeare
"...will divide the people (who/whom) most need to be brought together" [duplicate]
pronouns
relative-pronouns
grammatical-case
whom
who
“A similar hat to Jane” vs “A hat similar to Jane’s”
possessives
comparisons
grammatical-case
transatlantic-differences
"Who to follow" or "whom to follow"?
pronouns
grammatical-case
whom
Should foreign words used in English be inflected for gender, number, and case according to the conventions of their source language?
grammatical-number
loanwords
grammatical-case
foreign-phrases
grammatical-gender
Would pronouns be objective or subjective in this sentence?
pronouns
conjunctions
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
coordinating-conjunctions
What’s the ‘accusative absolute’?
terminology
syntactic-analysis
grammatical-case
ing
adverbials
"Be them" or "be they"?
grammaticality
pronouns
subjunctive-mood
grammatical-case
subject-verb-inversion
Subject vs. Object marking for whoever?
pronouns
grammatical-case
whoever-vs-whomever
He must decide who/whom to be. Which is correct?
grammatical-case
whom
be
who
"Give this work to whoever looks idle." or "Give this work to whomever looks idle." [duplicate]
pronouns
grammatical-case
whoever-vs-whomever
"as bad at English as me" vs. "as bad at English as I"
subjects
personal-pronouns
comparisons
grammatical-case
objects
What is the grammatical role of *your* in "... by your being ..." phrases?
syntactic-analysis
grammatical-case
gerund-phrases
Is it acceptable to start an emphatic sentence with "It is he who…"?
pronouns
syntactic-analysis
relative-clauses
grammatical-case
emphasis
"It is I," versus, "I am it" [closed]
pronouns
grammatical-case
Why is "whomse" not a word?
american-english
british-english
grammatical-case
whom
possessive-pronouns
"Being [he/him] is not easy." Which is prescriptively "correct"?
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
copular-verbs
style-manuals
absolute-constructions
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