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  2. Object pronoun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_pronoun

    In linguistics, an object pronoun is a personal pronoun that is used typically as a grammatical object: the direct or indirect object of a verb, or the object of a preposition. Object pronouns contrast with subject pronouns. Object pronouns in English take the objective case, sometimes called the oblique case or object case. [1]

  3. Count noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count_noun

    The concept of a "mass noun" is a grammatical concept and is not based on the innate nature of the object to which that noun refers. For example, "seven chairs" and "some furniture" could refer to exactly the same objects, with "seven chairs" referring to them as a collection of individual objects but with "some furniture" referring to them as a single undifferentiated unit.

  4. Noun class - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun_class

    Modern English expresses noun classes through the third person singular personal pronouns he (male person), she (female person), and it (object, abstraction, or animal), and their other inflected forms. Countable and uncountable nouns are distinguished by the choice of many/much.

  5. Mass noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_noun

    In linguistics, a mass noun, uncountable noun, non-count noun, uncount noun, or just uncountable, is a noun with the syntactic property that any quantity of it is treated as an undifferentiated unit, rather than as something with discrete elements. Uncountable nouns are distinguished from count nouns.

  6. English nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_nouns

    (The pronoun one is an exception, as in I like those ones.) English pronouns are also more limited than common nouns in their ability to take dependents. For instance, while common nouns can often be preceded by a determinative (e.g., the car), pronouns cannot. [7] In English conversation, pronouns are roughly as frequent as other nouns.

  7. English grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_grammar

    The personal pronouns retain morphological case more strongly than any other word class (a remnant of the more extensive Germanic case system of Old English). For other pronouns, and all nouns, adjectives, and articles, grammatical function is indicated only by word order, by prepositions, and by the "Saxon genitive or English possessive" (-'s ...

  8. Senator Warren wants US military to fix its own equipment - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/senator-warren-wants-us...

    Without the right to repair their own equipment, our servicemembers in the field are at risk," said Warren, a Democrat who represents Massachusetts. In one instance, U.S. Marines in Japan had to ...

  9. Bare nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bare_nouns

    This makes eliding "Los" from (6) infelicitous, and the resulting sentence ungrammatical. This analysis excludes bare plurals from the subject and indirect object positions, which is mainly representative of sentences in Spanish and Italian (though further restrictions apply in much the same way indefinite nouns are treated in both languages).