1 / 14

Today’s Notes: Nov. 12, 2010

Today’s Notes: Nov. 12, 2010. IV. Subject and object pronouns. A. Subject pronouns: 1. In the nominative case 2. Used as the subject of a sentence. 3. she, he, I, You, it, they, we B. Object Pronouns 1. In the objective case 2. Used as the object of a verb or preposition.

Download Presentation

Today’s Notes: Nov. 12, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Today’s Notes: Nov. 12, 2010 • IV. Subject and object pronouns. A. Subject pronouns: 1. In the nominative case 2. Used as the subject of a sentence. 3. she, he, I, You, it, they, we B. Object Pronouns 1. In the objective case 2. Used as the object of a verb or preposition. 3. me, you, him, her, it, us, you, them

  2. Subject and Object Pronouns 8th Grade English Pronoun Unit

  3. Earlier… • We talked about pronouns. • What are pronouns like? • What are personal pronouns? • What is an antecedent?

  4. Today… • We are going to look at some different types of pronouns. • How do we know when to use I and when to use me? They or them? We or us? He or him? • We have to look at the case!

  5. Subject Pronouns • Subject pronouns are pronouns that are in the nominative case (That means they are the subject!) • They are used as the subject of the sentence! (WOW!) • It’s “The Doer!”

  6. Subject Pronouns! • Example: • Rita likes books! She loves them so much! • In this case SHE is the subject pronoun. It replaces Rita.

  7. Subject Pronouns • Here are the common subject pronouns: • Memorize these and you shouldn’t have any trouble picking out subject pronouns!

  8. Let’s find some subject pronouns! (And ONLY the subject pronouns!) • Gwendolyn Brooks writes poems about everyday life; she is very famous. • She was born in Topeka, Kansas but grew up in Chicago. • In 1949 she wrote a poetry collection called Annie Allen. • I have read the book and the poems fascinate me.

  9. Object Pronouns • An object pronoun is a pronoun in the objective case of a verb or a preposition. • It’s “The Receiver” of the action • This means two things: • It is in the predicate of the sentence. • It is either the OBJECT of the preposition or the direct OBJECT.

  10. Object Pronouns • Example: • The burning potato chip truck amuses Olivia. The potatoes flying everywhere amuse her, too. • In this case her is the object pronoun. Her replaces Olivia.

  11. Object Pronouns • Here are the common object pronouns. • You should memorize these, too.

  12. Let’s find some object pronouns! (AND ONLY THE OBJECT PRONOUNS!) • Slang and rhythms of jazz and blues are important to her. • The poet Langston Hughes gave her literary advice. • Brooks taught poetry to student, she was a role model for them. • Brooks’s poems fascinate me.

  13. Remember… • Some personal pronouns are used as the subjects of sentences. • Some personal pronouns are used as the objects of verbs (direct objects!) or prepositions!

More Related