Who or Whom?

Use who when you are referring to the subject of a sentence and whom when you are referring to the object (who is receiving the action). Examples: Who wrote that article? Who can be replace by a subject/noun and rewritten as a sentence or the answer to the question: Chris Lang wrote that article. Who

Collective Nouns

Collective nouns name groups composed of members, things, or animals. Examples: army committee corporation department family group herd jury majority minority team Each collective noun above works as one unit, even though it is made up of more than one person or thing. You can’t have a committee, team, or family of one; you need

Pronouns

Pronouns take the place of a noun. He, she, we, they, you, it, and I are pronouns. They take the place of a noun in a sentence. After you write somebody’s name, you can use pronouns to avoid repetition in the following sentences that apply to that same person or thing. His, her, ours, their,