Posted by Nash Biani
ABSOLUTE BEGINNER COURSE
SPOKEN ENGLISH
Lesson 7
(Page 1)
English Grammar: Object Pronouns
me-us-you-you all-they-him-her-it
Section I
Grammar
THE USE OF OBJECT PRONOUNS IN SPOKEN ENGLISH
We have
looked at pronouns earlier too. We looked at I-we-you-he-she
and then we also saw how to use it-they. In
another lesson we studied possessives such as my-our-your
etc. In this lesson we will learn how to use object pronouns when we speak
English. In coming lessons we will look at other things such as days of the
week and months of the year.
ENGLISH AAM SPOKEN ENGLISH GRAMMAR BOOK.
Read,
understand and copy the following in your grammar book.
What are object pronouns and how do they help us in speaking English?
Broadly
speaking, object pronouns are pronouns which receive the action when we speak
English. What this means is:
Subject
pronouns like I, we, you, you all, they, she, he and it, do or perform the action that is
being spoken about.
Robert drove the car.
He drove the car.
Robert did
the driving. So, when we use the pronoun ‘he’ in the place of Robert, ‘he’
is called a subject
pronoun in English grammar.
Object
pronouns are pronouns on which the action is performed or which receive the
action.
Robert drove
the car.
Robert drove it.
The car was
driven by Robert. Robert did or performed the action of driving on the car. The
car itself did not do the action, which is driving, spoken about in the
sentence. That is why the pronoun ‘it’ in this sentence is called an object
pronoun.
Let us look
at another example:
Mohan gave Seema a rose.
He gave her a rose.
OR
He gave a
rose to her.
In this
sentence, Mohan
gave the rose to Seema or we could say, performed the action of giving. So,
when we replace Mohan with ‘he’, the pronoun ‘he’ is a subject pronoun.
Seema received the rose. In a way, we could say, the
action of giving the rose was performed on her or she received the effect of
the verb ‘gave’. So, when we use ‘her’ in place of Seema, the pronoun ‘her’
is called an object
pronoun.
Strictly speaking, 'Seema' and 'her' in the sentences above are indirect objects. But as we have decided, we don't want to get involved in these finer points, at least not now. What we need to know is that here, it should be 'her' and not 'she' that replaces 'Seema'. The difference between direct and indirect objects will be discussed in some lecture later.
The following table shows the subject and object pronouns in English grammar:
SUBJECT
|
OBJECT
|
I
|
me
|
we
|
us
|
you / you all
|
you / you all
|
they
|
them
|
he
|
him
|
she
|
her
|
it
|
it
|
Join me in this Spoken English video mehfil and speak English with me to improve your speaking skills.
LESSONS IN ABSOLUTE
BEGINNER COURSE
CHAPTER 1
|