Case is the grammatical function of a noun or pronoun. There are only three cases in modern
English, they are subjective (he), objective (him) and possessive (his). They may
seem more familiar in their old English form - nominative, accusative
and genitive. There is no dative case in modern English. Yippee!
First more good news. You cannot really go wrong here, we got
rid of most of our cases and as a result English is easier than many
other
languages because nouns and some indefinite pronouns (anyone, someone,
everyone, and so on) only have a distinctive case form for the possessive.
There are a few remnants of old English though, and pronouns have distinctive forms
in all three cases and should be used with a bit more care.
The pronoun cases are simple though. There are only three:-
1. Subjective case: pronouns used as subject.
2. Objective case: pronouns used as objects of verbs or prepositions.
3. Possessive case: pronouns which express ownership.
2. Objective case: pronouns used as objects of verbs or prepositions.
3. Possessive case: pronouns which express ownership.
Personal Pronoun |
||
Subjective/Nominative | Objective/Accusative | Possessive/Genitive |
---|---|---|
Referring to the subject in a sentence | Referring to the object in a sentence | The apostrophe form of the word ("Lynne's). |
I | Me | Mine |
You | You | Yours |
He | Him | His |
She | Her | Hers |
It | It | Its |
We | Us | Ours |
They | Them | Theirs |
Who | Whom | Whose |
These pronouns, and who and its compounds, are the only
words that are inflected in all three cases (subjective, objective,
possessive). In nouns the first two cases (subjective and objective) are
indistinguishable, and are called the common case. One result of this
simplicity is that, the sense of case being almost lost, the few
mistakes that can be made are made often, even by native speakers, some
of them so often that they are now almost right by prescription.