Fill in the correct pronoun or possessive adjective.
Underline the correct word. Choose the correct response.
This ESL EFL free worksheet is about practicing the subject and object pronouns, possessive adjectives, and can. Students read and answer the questions. The worksheet has an answer key.
Subject and Object Pronouns
Subject pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence, while object pronouns are used as the object.
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Subject Pronoun | Example | Object Pronoun | Example |
---|---|---|---|
I | I run. | me | Help me. |
you | You sing. | you | I see you. |
he | He eats. | him | Call him. |
she | She swims. | her | Find her. |
it | It works. | it | Fix it. |
we | We play. | us | Join us. |
they | They laugh. | them | Meet them. |
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive adjectives are used to show ownership or relationship.
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Possessive Adjective | Example |
---|---|
my | My book. |
your | Your car. |
his | His dog. |
her | Her cat. |
its | Its tail. |
our | Our house. |
their | Their game. |
The Use of “Can”
“Can” is a modal verb used to express ability, permission, or possibility.
Use | Example |
---|---|
Ability | I can swim. |
Permission | Can I go? |
Possibility | It can rain. |
Examples in Sentences:
- Subject Pronoun: “She can bake amazing cakes.” (Here, ‘She’ is the subject doing the action.)
- Object Pronoun: “The teacher praised him for his work.” (In this case, ‘him’ is receiving the action of praise.)
- Possessive Adjective: “Their presentation was impressive.” (The adjective ‘their’ shows that the presentation belongs to them.)
- Can (Ability): “He can solve complex problems easily.” (This shows the ability of ‘he’.)
- Can (Permission): “Can you pass the salt?” (Asking for permission.)
- Can (Possibility): “We can meet tomorrow if you’re free.” (Indicating a possibility.)
Remember, subject pronouns are always the ‘doers’ of an action, object pronouns are the ‘receivers,’ and possessive adjectives show who ‘owns’ something. And “can” is your go-to verb for all things possible, permissible, or able!
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