Part 5 (1/2)

13 He purchased ---- he wished

14 There is no cloud ---- has not its silver lining

15 It is the saht

16 The man and horse ---- you see pass here every afternoon

17 ---- did they seek?

18 They inquired ---- he was going to do

19 Who was it ---- lost the book?

20 The man ---- was a Frenchman was very much excited

21 It is neither the party nor its candidate ---- gains support

22 That is a characteristic ---- makes him seem almost rude

23 It is the same tool ---- I used all day

24 He is a man ---- inspires little confidence

25 ---- does he expect of us?

26 It is just such a thing ---- I need

27 There are few ---- will vote for hion and children ---- you just saw came from our town

29 He ---- writes out his lesson does all ---- can be expected

30 Was it you or the cat -------- he always sings

32 Such ---- I have is yours

33 All the men and horses ---- we had were lost

34 That is ---- pleased me most and ---- everyone talked about

35 The horse was one ---- I had never ridden before

36 That is ---- everyone said

28 CASE FORMS OF pronOUNS Soative pronouns have distinctive forms for the different cases, and the failure to use the proper case forms in the sentence is one of the most frequent sources of error The case to be used is to be determined by the use which the pronoun, not its antecedent, has in the sentence In the sentence, _I name HIM_, note that _him_ is the object of the verb _na at the first of the sentence, _whorammatically the object of the verb _seek_ In the use of pronouns coe of when to use the different cases

Note the following different case forms of pronouns:

Nominative: _I, we, you, thou, ye, he, she, they, it, who_

Objective: _me, us, you, thee, ye, him, her, it, them, whom_

Possessive: _my, mine, our, ours, thy, thine, your, yours, his, her, hers, its, their, theirs, whose_

It will be noted that, while some forms are the same in both the nominative and objective cases, _I, WE, HE, SHE, THEY, THOU_, AND _WHO_ ARE ONLY PROPER WHERE THE NOMINATIVE CASE SHOULD BE USED

_ME, US, HIM, THEM, THEE, WHOM_, AND _HER_, except when _her_ is possessive, ARE ONLY PROPER WHEN THE OBJECTIVE CASE IS DEMANDED

These forms must be remembered It is only with these pronouns that mistakes are made in the use of the nominative and objective cases

29 THE FOLLOWING OUTLINE EXPLAINS THE USE OF THE DIFFERENT CASE FORMS OF THE pronOUNS The outline should be mastered

THE NOMINATIVE CASE SHOULD BE USED:

1 When the noun or pronoun is the subject of a finite verb; that is, a verb other than an infinitive See 3 under Objective Case

2 When it is an attribute complement An attribute complement, as explained in Chapter I, is a word used in the predicate explaining or stating so about the subject Examples: _It is I, The man was HE, The people were THEY of e spoke_