"She" is a subject pronoun, which means "she" is performing an action:- She is running. - She can sing. - She is my sister."Her" is an object pronoun, which means "her" is receiving an action:- I am giving the pen to her. - I will call Mike and her."Her" is also a possessive pronoun:- Her hair is messy. - Her car is expensive. - Her coffee is ready.
can you please explain me how tu use bored and boring?
"Bored" is how you feel: I'm bored right now, so can I play video games?"Boring" = not fun; not amusing; not entertaining: That game is so boring! I want to play something else.
1. The BBC wrote a good article on "any": http://bbc.in/1z7UjyL2. Are you asking about see + -ing (e.g., I see people swimming), or seeing (e.g., We're seeing too much violence on television)?
have u heard these words?
"iolls and uolls."
uolls comes from "you all."
John Jake is my name. You can call me 'either or neither' of the two. Which is the right one?
If you're saying that someone can call you John or Jake, then "either."If you're saying that someone can't call you John or Jake, then "neither." This means that someone needs to call you something else, not John or Jake.
Would is basically used for past tense of will and imaginative/uncertain stuff/purpose of being polite , whilw will is used for something that is certain . am i correct
In simple terms, yes.
What is the term used to call someone who gets a scholarship ? And what about someone who gives scholarship