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What are the subject pronouns?
I, you, he/she/it, we, you, they
What are the object pronouns?
me, you, him/her/it, us, you, them
What are the possesive adjetives?
my, your, his/her/its, our, your, their
What are the possessive pronouns?
mine, yours, his/hers, ours, yours, theirs
How many objects can some verbs have?
Some verbs can have two objects, usually a thing (the direct object) and a person (the indirect object).
If the direct object is a noun, how is the phrase constructed?
We usually use:
verb + indirect object + direct object
The order can also be:
verb + direct object + for or to + indirect object
If the direct object is a pronoun (it, them), how is the phrase constructed?
We usually use:
verb + direct object + indirect object, with for or to before the indirect object.
What verbs use as an object with for?
bring sth for/to sb, buy sth for sb, cook sth for sb, find sth for sb, get sth for sb, make sth for sb
What verbs use an object with to?
give sth to sb, lend sth to sb, offer sth to sb, read sth to sb, sell sth to sb, send sth to sb, show sth to sb, take sth to sb, write sth to sb.
What happens if the indirect object is a pronoun?
We use the object pronoun, not the subject pronoun:
I'm going to lend it to her. NOT I'm going to lend it to she.