Part 6 (1/2)

A Graue Samuel Johnson 17490K 2022-07-20

Oblique Thee, You

You is couage of ceremony, where the second person plural is used for the second person singular, You are ular Plural

Nom He, They, Applied to masculines

Oblique Him, Them

Nom She, They, Applied to feminines

Oblique Her, Thes

Oblique Its, Them

For it the practice of ancient writers was to use he, and for its, his

The possessive pronouns, like other adjectives, are without cases or change of termination

The possessive of the first person is my, mine, our, ours; of the second, thy, thine, your, yours; of the third, from he, his; from she, her, and hers; and in the plural, their, theirs, for both sexes

Ours, yours, hers, theirs, are used when the substantive preceding is separated by a verb, as These are our books These books are ours Your children excel ours in stature, but ours surpass yours in learning

Ours, yours, hers, theirs, notwithstanding their seeular and plural substantives, as, This book is ours These books are ours

Mine and thine were forh now disused in prose, ht be still properly continued in poetry: they are used as ours and yours, when they are referred to a substantive preceding, as thy house is larger than arden is more spacious than thine

Their and theirs are the possessives likewise of they, when they is the plural of it, and are therefore applied to things

pronouns relative are, hich, what, whether, whosoever, whatsoever

Nom Who

Gen Whose

Other oblique cases Whom

Nom Which

Gen Of which, or whose

Other oblique cases Which