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It is he versus it is him [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . . The case of he him should depend on other considerations, such as, the proper case after the linking verb, "is" It should be simply a matter of which is more correct, It is he Or, It is him My Latin education would have me pick the former But my knowledge of colloquial English tells me that the phrase, "it was him", is commonly used
Where he is vs Where is he [closed] - English Language Usage . . . 3 Where is he? Do you know where he is? Yes, I know where he is The natural subject-predicate order is inverted in special questions (those beginning with an interrogative pronoun such as what, where, etc), but not in object clauses By object clause I mean a clause that substitutes a single-word object For example: I know [him] I know [this
Is using he for a gender-neutral third-person correct? I know there are different opinions on this issue My question: Is using "he" for a general, gender-neutral third person still in common use for formal writing? By common use I mean, can I expect my
Difference between where is he from and where he is from 2 To convert the statement He is from the USA into a Yes No question, one moves the first auxiliary verb (is in this example; all forms of be are auxiliaries) to a position before the subject noun phrase (he in this example), and adds a question intonation if speaking, or a question mark if writing So the result is Is he from the USA?
Which is recommended preferable between (s)he he she? Yes, both (s)he and he she are acceptable abbreviations for usage where space is at a premium and gender of a person is important s he is not a common abbreviation, and will confuse more users than the other two
He doesnt vs He dont - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Grammatically, for he she it we use "does" or "doesn't" like in, He doesn't eat meat but these days I'm observing the usage of the above sentence (especially in American movies) like this, He don't eat meat So, after a lot of observations, I'm assuming that both usages are correct My assumption - When to use "don't"? In temporary situations