Most speakers of English know intuitively when to use I, me, and my. The choices reflect differences in case, the form a pronoun takes to indicate its function in a sentence. Pronouns functioning as subjects or subject complements are in the subjective case (I); those functioning as objects are in the objective case (me); those functioning as possessives are in the possessive case (my).
SUBJECTIVE | OBJECTIVE | POSSESSIVE |
I | me | my/mine |
we | us | our/ours |
you | you | your/yours |
he/she/it | him/her/it | his/her/hers/its |
they | them | their/theirs |
who/whoever | whom/whomever | whose |
Problems tend to occur in the following situations.
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LearningCurve > Pronouns