Graded Lessons in English an Elementary English Grammar Consisting of One Hundred Practical Lessons, Carefully Graded and Adapted to the Class-Room by Alonzo Reed;Brainerd Kellogg
page 167 of 310 (53%)
page 167 of 310 (53%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
CORRECT THE FOLLOWING ERRORS.
Our's, your's, hi's, their's, her's, it's, hisn, yourn, hern. LESSON 85. FORMS OF THE PRONOUN. +_Remember_+ that _I, we, thou, ye, he, she, they_, and _who_ are +_nominative_+ forms, and must not be used in the objective case. +_Remember_+ that _me, us, thee, him, her, them_, and _whom_ are +_objective_+ forms, and must not be used in the nominative case. +To the Teacher+.--The _eight_ nominative forms and the _seven_ objective forms given above are the only distinctive nominative and objective forms in the English language. Let the pupils become familiar with them. CORRECT THE FOLLOWING ERRORS. Him and me are good friends. The two persons were her and me. Us girls had a jolly time. It is them, surely. Who will catch this? Me. Them that despise me shall be lightly esteemed. Who is there? Me. |
|