I, he, she, it and you are called these?
subject pronouns
This type of pronoun follows an action verb.
object pronoun
You use this to replace any letters that are left out.
an apostrophe
The subject pronoun in this sentence: "We Americans issued our first stamps in 1847."
We
This takes the place of a possessive noun.
possessive pronoun
We and they are called these.
plural subject pronouns
The pronouns me, him, her and it are these types of pronouns.
singular object pronouns
Many contractions are formed by combining these type of words.
pronouns and verbs
Use this word with an object pronoun that refers to "we"
us
Person, place, animal or thing.
These are nouns
You use an "s" in the verb when you have these subject pronouns.
He, she, it.
These words can be both subject and object pronouns.
you and it
These words combine to make they're.
they and are
This pronoun can be both a subject and object pronoun.
you
Demonstrative pronouns THIS, THAT, THESE, AND THOSE point out these things.
Specific person, place, or thing (nearby or farther away)?
Many verbs with -s on the end are used when using these pronouns.
He, she, it
Fill in the blank: The librarian showed ______ books by Jean George. (we, us)
us
The contraction for you+all.
y'all
These are object pronouns.
me, you, him, her, it, us, and them
Correct this sentence: "Have you ever seen that there before?"
"Have you ever seen that before?"
This is the noun the pronoun refers to.
pronoun's antecedent
This takes the place of a noun and it is placed in the predicate.
object pronoun
A pronoun and a verb in just one word, using an apostrophe.
A contraction.
These are subject pronouns.
I, you, he, she, it, we, and they
Problem or conflict, rising action, conflict, resolution.
Plot