Asked by Jack
"Susannah Wheatley, wife of slaveholder John wheatley, took great interest in Phillis's education, and it was (she/her) who taught Phillis how to read and write English."
We're to choose the appropriate verb for the subject (Susannah Wheatley), but I'm having a bit of trouble with this one. They both seem correct (though 'she' sounds archaic), and I'm able to reconcile both with the sentence structure ('it was her' and 'she taught'). Am I going about it incorrectly or is it as ambiguous at it seems?
We're to choose the appropriate verb for the subject (Susannah Wheatley), but I'm having a bit of trouble with this one. They both seem correct (though 'she' sounds archaic), and I'm able to reconcile both with the sentence structure ('it was her' and 'she taught'). Am I going about it incorrectly or is it as ambiguous at it seems?
Answers
Answered by
GuruBlue
It was "she" is correct. She is a nominative case pronoun and can be interchanged with the subject. She was it. You would never say "her was it." Remember "being verbs" are the same thing as equal signs... so what is on one side is equal to what is on the other.
Answered by
Jack
Oh, I was doing it wrong, looking at the surrounding context and not the subject it was related to, wasn't I?
Thanks.
Thanks.
Answered by
Jack
We're to choose the appropriate verb for the subject
El oh el, I fail; I meant pronoun.
El oh el, I fail; I meant pronoun.
Answered by
GuruBlue
LOL... the correct pronoun for the position in the sentence.
Quick lesson... subject pronouns:
I, you, he, she, it, we, they
Object pronouns: me, you, him, her, it, us, them.
I
Quick lesson... subject pronouns:
I, you, he, she, it, we, they
Object pronouns: me, you, him, her, it, us, them.
I
Answered by
Jack
Thankya. :o
Answered by
cancan
examples of subject and object pronouns
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.