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New posts in personal-pronouns
"He and I", "Him and me" [duplicate]
pronouns
personal-pronouns
Should it be "you and I" or "you and me" in the song "We are the world"
poetry
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
songs
How to call attention to "I" without "I myself" or the pretentious "even I"?
word-choice
grammaticality
connotation
personal-pronouns
emphasis
Are there any old third-person singular pronouns the way “thou” is an old second-person pronoun?
pronouns
personal-pronouns
archaicisms
"One of them was/were you"
personal-pronouns
Pronoun cases (e.g. "my," "his") before gerund constructions [duplicate]
grammaticality
pronouns
gerunds
personal-pronouns
Reflexive pronoun use when subject is a subset of the prepositional object
pronouns
personal-pronouns
reflexives
Using "he" or "she" for an animal not a person?
personal-pronouns
animacy
natural-gender
Why is it common in English to address animals as "it"?
personal-pronouns
animacy
natural-gender
Can I Switch from "it" to "he" or "she" when referring to an animal in a story? [closed]
personal-pronouns
animals
animacy
natural-gender
Why do we use the objective case pronoun "me" in "He can watch me clean the car"?
infinitives
subjects
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
catenative-verbs
"It is fun to be him/he." Which is correct?
infinitives
personal-pronouns
grammatical-case
be
copular-verbs
Are pronouns for non-universal divines (such as "Zeus") capitalized?
capitalization
personal-pronouns
Is saying "Let me show you it" totally wrong?
grammaticality
word-order
personal-pronouns
indirect-objects
ditransitivity
in spite of him/his
personal-pronouns
True or False: "English lacks a standard gender-neutral second-person plural pronoun."
personal-pronouns
gender-neutral
locatives
Suggestions to indicate the second person pronoun is singular?
grammatical-number
personal-pronouns
What do you call a person who writes letters?
nouns
personal-pronouns
letter-writing
What do you call someone who studies letters?
nouns
personal-pronouns
letter-writing
Can the gerund clause take a personal pronoun as its subject in “It’s no use (his?) crying over lost love”?
grammaticality
gerunds
personal-pronouns
gerund-phrases
extraposition
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