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Questions tagged [personal-pronouns]

Questions related to personal pronoun, an independent pronoun which can have various forms according to gender, number, person, and case.

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0 votes
2 answers
112 views

Why are pronouns in gender-like listings always come in threes?

In a bio you might be asked to list the pronouns you'd like to be addressed with. For example: they/them/theirs or she/her/hers But why does this list has three entries? Wouldn't it be enough to ...
7 votes
1 answer
301 views

Why is "each" ungrammatical in "It’s an insult to us each"?

The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (Pages 427-28) has this: Universal personal pronouns of the type us all [6] i a. They’ve invited us all. b. It’s an insult to us both. ii a. She likes ...
9 votes
5 answers
2k views

"Scarlet with rage, she swept past her employer and stormed up the stairs." — "Scarlet with rage" modifies "she", so adjectives can modify pronouns?

collinsdictionary.com: (1) Scarlet with rage, she swept past her employer and stormed up the stairs. I thought adjectives can modify personal pronouns only in short phrases like "poor me" or ...
3 votes
1 answer
5k views

Can I use "it" to refer to a person?

Is using "it" to refer to a person ok? If it is, why? Q)Who is your teacher? A)It is Mr. Red.
0 votes
1 answer
41 views

In “AS an organization WE” is WE considered a personal pronoun? [closed]

I am doing a student activity called (MUN) and one of the rules is having to refrain from using personal pronouns. Now since Arabic is my native language, this makes speaking extremely hard as I ...
16 votes
4 answers
3k views

How are pronoun ambiguities resolved?

Are pronoun referents in English resolved syntactically or semantically? Do they always refer to the closest matching noun? A Wikipedia article has these examples: We gave the bananas to the monkeys ...
12 votes
7 answers
29k views

Use of "myself" in business-speak

Occasionally, I will hear or read coworkers using "myself" in place of "me," as in: If you have any questions, you can contact Gimli or myself. I have sent the list to Legolas, ...
4 votes
1 answer
169 views

Why is "he" twice as common as "she" in the English language

When you look at word frequency data in English such as the Corpus Of Contemporary American English (COCA) he appears on 16th place with 6500 occurrences per mil and she at 35th place with 3210 per ...
5 votes
4 answers
2k views

"...his parents' dream of *him* achieving a Cambridge degree." What is the function of "him" here? [duplicate]

I have a problem analysing this sentence from the point of finite/nonfinite clauses, clause elements and their functions: He does not want to destroy his parents' dream of him achieving a Cambridge ...
474 votes
6 answers
213k views

Did English ever have a formal version of "you"?

Off the top of my head, Danish "De" (practically never used), German "Sie", Chinese "您", French "vous", Spanish "usted" are formal ways of addressing ...
-1 votes
2 answers
81 views

Quantifier Floating and Subject Pronouns

I did some research about this topic; my main question is Are some placements more well-regarded than others? I mean, are quantifiers before personal pronouns more descriptive grammar for example? ...
0 votes
2 answers
108 views

Why is "it" used instead of "he/she" for human being in "it becomes a wise and virtuous man…"?

Now this relaxation of the mind from work consists on playful words or deeds. Therefore it becomes a wise and virtuous man to have recourse to such things at times. —Thomas Aquinas Is the bold phrase ...
0 votes
1 answer
127 views

Why do some people start with subject 'I' and later shift to 'we'?

This is something I have noticed on a fairly regular basis, and this is a recent example, where the questioner starts by saying "I'm working on" and ends up asking "How do we...?" ...
8 votes
5 answers
2k views

Which English dialects have 2nd person plural?

"Y'all" is the famous southern US form of the 2nd person plural. The Brooklyn / Italian-American "youse" might be another. While the existence and usage of "y'all" has been addressed somewhat ...
20 votes
9 answers
46k views

Could "them" mean "those"?

Background Nowadays, I see "them" used to mean "those" a lot. I don't know if it was as common in the past. For example, take "one of them people". On researching about ...
13 votes
2 answers
94k views

"Me and my wife" or "my wife and me"

Which order is more correct: me and my wife or my wife and me? The sentence in which this is used is Ms. Smith informed me and my wife that she was afraid of being accosted.
5 votes
1 answer
115 views

Personal pronouns in 18th-century Cornish English

I think in the year 1700 there were still a few adults in Cornwall whose usual mode of communication among themselves was the rapidly dying Cornish language, but only a tiny number of children could ...
4 votes
2 answers
1k views

What is the correct way to say "It was this week that Justin and my lives changed forever"?

What is the correct way to indicate "Justin and I" as being possessive of our individual lives in this sentence? Is there a way to do this without restructuring the sentence? A friend of mine posted ...
9 votes
3 answers
284 views

What explains the restrictions on determinative "you"?

As Huddleston & Pullum note, "you" can sometimes be used as a determiner: You idiots never learn. I'll never understand you idiots. But this generally can't occur in the singular: *...
1 vote
1 answer
770 views

Whom can I trust, if not ____. a) he b) him which one is grammatical? [duplicate]

I know about the conditional sentences that go as following: "If I were he, I would have forgotten the whole lesson." In the sentence above, "he" is preferable to "him,"...
3 votes
2 answers
2k views

Why is "be" the only English verb that inflects for grammatical person, not just for grammatical number like all the rest of them?

Why do we say “I am a teacher” instead of “I is a teacher” considering that I is a singular pronoun not a plural pronoun? Don’t singulars always take -s forms? Why does be work differently?
0 votes
1 answer
145 views

How to write s/he at the beginning of a sentence? [closed]

In a document I want to use the gender form of personal pronouns. But if I use "s/he" at the beginning of a sentence, are both "s" and "h" to be written in capitals? It ...
-1 votes
1 answer
224 views

Usage of they/them as a pronoun in confusing sentences [duplicate]

Pronouns are an integral part of the english language. However, they can also cause confusion and problems within communication, especially in the modern era, as some people choose to use ...
4 votes
2 answers
1k views

Difference between "Please don't be long" and "Please don't YOU be long" [duplicate]

In the song "Blue Jay Way" from the Beatles, we've got the following lyrics : Please don't be long Please don't you be very long I'm (obviously) not a native English speaker but the first ...
4 votes
1 answer
414 views

When referring to oneself using pronouns only, would it be appropriate to use "me" instead of "myself"?

When you refer to yourself without saying your name, (without gendered pronouns) would it be of appropriate use to say "me" instead of "myself"? for example: I would give me a big ...
0 votes
1 answer
14k views

When is the construction "I myself" suitable? [duplicate]

A previous question, How to call attention to "I" without "I myself" or the pretentious "Even I"?, suggested that the "I myself" construction is often used for emphasis, with one answer correctly ...
1 vote
2 answers
121 views

How should I refer to a person without identifying them? Can I use 'one'? [closed]

If I wish to refer to an individual person but without describing that person or drawing attention to the characteristics of that person or without identifying that person - how should I do it ? The ...
12 votes
2 answers
2k views

When is it acceptable to address someone else in the first person, as in the classic nurse's question to a patient: "How are we this morning?"

I am sure the nurse means this question as bright and breezy, perhaps inviting the response "We are (more likely "I am") fine, thank you." However, it is hard to avoid the ...
2 votes
2 answers
237 views

The English usage of the subject pronoun "We"

Can "We" be used as an indefinite pronoun such as "Everybody" or "One" to refer to people in general. Example: One cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs. It is a (French) proverb originally ...
12 votes
3 answers
3k views

Choice of “it” versus “he/she”

I am not sure what is the underlying rule for when the use of “it” is appropriate and when “he / she”. Consider the following two examples: There is a lady at the door. It is my aunt. Do you know ...
-1 votes
2 answers
101 views

Talking about a third person, formally [closed]

I am talking about my professor to his secretary. Is it polite and formal to refer to him as "he"? or should I use "they"?
0 votes
3 answers
298 views

"Will I open this box?" - "No, you mustn't."

I'm struggling with "will I" in this sentence. Is it grammatically correct? I know that "shall I" would be fine, but does "will I" work too?
16 votes
8 answers
4k views

Why is emphatic "Yes, I know THAT" okay, but not "Yes, I know IT"?

In the context of this ELL question asking about using pronoun "it" as an object, it struck me that whereas it's perfectly natural to place heavy stress for emphasis on the "...
3 votes
1 answer
137 views

Suggestions to indicate the second person pronoun "you" is singular?

Do you have any suggestions to clearly show that the second person pronoun is singular, not simply basing it on context? I would appreciate hearing your ideas!
6 votes
1 answer
998 views

American vs British English: using 3rd person singular pronoun or person's name?

I grew up in the UK and now have a lot of American friends and colleagues; I tend to notice an almost systematic difference in the way Americans use 3rd person singular pronouns in preference to a ...
8 votes
3 answers
3k views

"Being [he/him] is not easy." Which is prescriptively "correct"?

"It is I" follows a well-known prescriptivist rule This question is about prescriptive grammar. It’s a fairly well-known prescriptivist rule that “me, him, her, them” (in other words, pronouns in the ...
0 votes
0 answers
37 views

Important! Is there a term for misusing the pronoun “you”? [duplicate]

This is somewhat challenging to describe but I’m taking a crack at it. I have the tendency to use the pronoun “you” when speaking to someone about an event, or story. I would almost describe it as a ...
3 votes
3 answers
387 views

Would pronouns be objective or subjective in this sentence?

Sentence: John's entire plan was nothing more than him/he and me/I walking by his neighbors' houses armed with twenty-eight inches of potentially bone-crushing sports equipment. Should I use "...
0 votes
1 answer
348 views

I, and I/me alone, did it all

I, and I/me alone, did it all. Which option, I or me, and why, should be used in a parenthetical like this one? Secondly, is it the same situation as in Me/I alone, I did it ?
6 votes
3 answers
754 views

'She' as sentence object [duplicate]

In the following sentence from Lolita, Humbert Humbert, in describing with maximum condescension the character of his new wife, states: 'I had always been aware of the possessive streak in her, but I ...
0 votes
2 answers
278 views

Can you use "him" for a wolf?

I encountered this: This is like dangling a big, juicy steak in front of a wolf, without letting him eat it. Using "him" for a wolf sounds sort of non-native English, as if the sentence ...
10 votes
2 answers
810 views

Analyzing 'genitive/accusative + V-ing phrase (gerund-participle phrase)' as different constructions

(1) I regretted [his leaving the firm]. (2) I regretted [him leaving the firm]. (3) I regretted [leaving the firm]. (4) He didn’t bother [giving me a copy]. Regarding the above sentences The ...
0 votes
2 answers
4k views

Using pronoun "it" instead of (personal) pronouns "her" or "him"

Can pronoun "it" be used instead of (personal) pronouns "her" or "him" in a disparaging/derogative manner especially in the personal pronouns? I've watched a movie wherein a dead body was found and, ...
2 votes
2 answers
199 views

there is, there are with personal pronouns

I almost never see "there is/are" used with personal pronouns. Why do they not get along with each other? 1 There is me in this house. 2 There are them in this town. I think they are wrong. But ...
1 vote
2 answers
2k views

Which pronoun is used for Spirit or Ghost and is there a rule that says we must use certain pronoun for the Spirit? Is it a common gender noun?

Which pronoun is used for the Holy Spirit (or Holy Ghost) in Christian theology? Is there a rule that says we must use certain pronoun for the Spirit? And is it a common gender noun? The controversy ...
34 votes
6 answers
7k views

What is the difference between “they” and “it” for people, especially for those people who identify as non-binary?

I’ve heard that they is used as a word to refer to people who are non-binary. Since English is not my first language, I’m not sure what the difference is between they and it in these usages. Of course,...
0 votes
0 answers
23 views

Personal pronouns interacting with word order [duplicate]

Many will be familiar already with the technical details of when to use 'I' and 'me' in a sentence. I hit him, he hit me, etc. What I'm confused about is cases such as "me and John went to the ...
372 votes
22 answers
135k views

Is there a correct gender-neutral singular pronoun ("his" vs. "her" vs. "their")?

Is there a pronoun I can use as a gender-neutral pronoun when referring back to a singular noun phrase? Each student should save his questions until the end. Each student should save her questions ...
0 votes
2 answers
278 views

Can the gerund clause take a personal pronoun as its subject in “It’s no use (his?) crying over lost love”?

From a gram­mar book, I’ve have learned that a gerund clause can be op­tion­ally pre­ceded by a per­sonal pro­noun to show the log­i­cal sub­ject of the verb; that is, who­ever is do­ing the gerund’s ...
0 votes
1 answer
1k views

What do you call someone who studies letters?

I recently asked a question for nouns pertaining to people who write letters. But is there a word to call someone who studies letters (academically)?

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