Tag: pronouns

Personal pronouns in Hebrew

אני (ani) - I את (at) - you (female singular) אתה (ata) - you (male singular) הוא (hu) - he היא (hi) - she אנחנו (anachnu) - we אתם (atem) - you (male plural) אתן (aten) - you (female plural) הם (hem) - they (male) הן (hen) - they (female) Personal pronouns in Hebrew can … Continue reading Personal pronouns in Hebrew

Possessive pronouns in Hebrew

In Hebrew the possessive pronoun and comes after the noun. שלי (sheli) - my שלך (shelcha/shelach) - your שלו (shelo) - his שלה (shela) - her שלנו (shelanu) - our שלכם (shelachem) - your (plural male) שלכן (shelachen) - your (plural female) שלהם (shelahem) - their (male) שלהן (shelhen) - their (female) Possessive pronouns are … Continue reading Possessive pronouns in Hebrew

Turkish personal pronouns

ben - I sen - you (informal, singular) o - he, she, it biz - we siz - you (formal, plural) onlar - they   ben - I Ben is a personal pronoun used to refer to the first person singular (I). It is used when talking about oneself. Example: Benim adım David. (My name … Continue reading Turkish personal pronouns

Three groups of demonstrative pronouns in Czech: ten, ta, to – tento, tato, toto – tamten, tamta, tamto

Three groups of demonstrative pronouns in Czech: ten, ta, to – tento, tato, toto – tamten, tamta, tamto

Czech demonstrative pronouns change according to gender and case. Similar to English, Czech has a three-level system of demonstrative pronouns. the - this - that For example, "ten" (masculine) changes differently in different cases: "toho" (genitive - 2th case), "tomu" (dative - 3. case), etc. The first table shows the basic meaning of "the". singular … Continue reading Three groups of demonstrative pronouns in Czech: ten, ta, to – tento, tato, toto – tamten, tamta, tamto