Main content
Grammar
Course: Grammar > Unit 3
Lesson 4: Subject, object, person, and numberSubject and object pronouns
Before we get any further with pronouns, let's cover what the difference between a subject and an object pronoun is, because the distinction between those two concepts will start coming up a good deal.
Want to join the conversation?
- What about sentences like, "It might be comfortable for you than for they to sit in the balcony." Should it be they or them? How do you tell?(14 votes)
- The sentence needs first to be rewritten. It is a comparative, so the word "more" needs to be inserted, as in: "It might be MORE comfortable for you than for them to sit in the balcony."
Then grammatically, we need to see the pronouns "you" and "them" as OBJECTS of the preposition, "FOR" that precedes them.
Here's the sentence, pulled apart:
It (subject) might be (verb) more comfortable (predicate adjective) for you than for them to sit in the balcony (prepositional phrase, modifying something or other that came before).(27 votes)
- At, the sentence would be "She wrote an it"? That doesn't make sense to me. 3:00(10 votes)
- Ah, Gabriel, things don't have to make sense to you, or to me, for them to make sense. So, let's have a little story.
The first year students were writing words they learned.
Jeremy wrote an "on".
Julie wrote an "in".
Then he wrote an "at", and she wrote an "it."
How's that?(10 votes)
- Is objects just a category that Direct and Indirect Objects fit in?(7 votes)
- Using mathematical terms, "objects" is a set, of which "Direct objects" and "indirect objects" are subsets. There are also objects of prepositions, but that's another story entirely.(13 votes)
- So as you said " they show him a guitar ". and you switch it to " He showed them a guitar." and you underline, he and them, wouldn't you underline guitar as an object also sense you could hold it and see it?(8 votes)
- A present, I gave her.(11 votes)
- In Reina wrote an email to Carl, are "email" and "Carl" both objects?0:45(7 votes)
- Yes, we differentiate them as direct objects and indirect objects.(6 votes)
- Is the sentence "The email was written by her" grammatically correct?
My understanding would be that as 'her' is the object pronoun (has stuff done to it), and the email is an objective clause (having stuff done to it), there is no subjective part to the sentence so it is incorrect?
However it sounds correct to me.(5 votes)- The question here is about "active" and "passive" voice. Let's look at it this way:
Active voice: "She wrote the email."
Passive voice: "The email was written by her."
The explanation you offered may, indeed, have some merit, but it's unnecessarily complex for something so simple.(3 votes)
- Who or when is that right?(3 votes)
- Sometimes who or when is right, and sometimes not.
(I think that response was almost as unclear as the question.)(2 votes)
- Hello! Are subjects and subject pronouns always at the start of a sentence? And if not, can you give me some examples? Also, does the placement of subjects and objects (and their pronouns) have to do with Active and Passive voice? Thanks!
Regards,
Lakshyathehuskyboy(3 votes) - I don’t really get it at 2.20(3 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] All right,
so grammarians, I want to talk to you about the difference between subject and object pronouns, but before we do that, let's start off with a little primer on what subjects
and objects actually are, Just generally for our
grammatical purposes. In grammar, the subject is
the part of the sentence or clause that does a thing. The subject does a thing. The object, on the other hand, is the thing that is acted on,
has stuff done to it, so the object has stuff done to it. The subject acts, the
object is acted upon, let's give an example. In the sentence, Reina wrote an e-mail, the subject of the sentence,
the doer of the thing is Reina, right, as the subject. The thing she is doing
is writing an e-mail, so Reina wrote an e-mail. E-mail is the object of the verb wrote. It is the object of the sentence. Now, there are cases when a sentence doesn't have an object. For example, we could just say Reina wrote. It doesn't have an object, it's just Reina's the subject, and
then there is no object. This is what we call intransitive usage, but you don't need to write
that down or anything. Now, understanding the relationship between e-mail and Reina enables you to understand how subject
and object pronouns are used. When we're subbing out
these nouns for pronouns, we can figure out which
ones we have to use, because pronouns have different forms depending on whether or not
they are subjects or objects. Reina is a girl's name, and if
we know that Reina is a girl, we can refer to her as either she or her. These are two of the feminine pronouns. One of these is a subject,
and one of them is an object. She is the subject form,
and her is the object form. If we wanted to rewrite this sentence, speaking of Reina, we would say, she wrote an e-mail. Not, her wrote an e-mail, you see. Because her is the object pronoun, and therefore is the thing that, the object pronoun has stuff done to it, as opposed to the doer of things. She is the subject form, it's the doer. For e-mail it's easy, this
just becomes it in all cases. The subject form, and the
object form are the same. Let's do a couple more examples just to shore this up
so you see what I mean. I give her a present. Right now, I is the
subject, her is the object. Subject, object, but
what if we switched it? What would it look like then? Well it wouldn't be her give I a present, because since we're switching
the subject and the object, we're gonna be switching the
pronouns that we use too, so it would be, she gave me a present. Now, she is the subject form of her, and me is the subject, is
the object form, excuse me, me is the object form of I. Get a little period in there. Same thing with they and he. They showed him a guitar. Why not? They is the subject,
and him is the object. Let's give it the old switcheroo. He showed them a guitar. Now, we do the switcheroo, him becomes he, so we go from the object form which is him to the subject from which is he, and then they, the
subject form becomes them, the object form. Now when it comes to you and it, you're in luck, because
the subject and object forms of these are the same, so subject equals object, with you and it. I could say you give it a present just as easily as I could
say it gives you a present. I didn't realize I changed
this to the past tense. She gives me a present. There we go, that's better. That's the difference between a subject and an object pronoun. You can learn anything. David out.