PRONOUNSm 

NOMINATIVE CASE

 
PERSON SINGULAR PLEURAL
1st I ~ng we ~ngs
2nd  you y~ng you y~ngs
3rd he/she/it t~ng/s~ng/r~ng they t~ngs/s~ngs/r~ngs
4th "????" st~ng "they" st~ngs
 
person p~ng
persons p~ngs
 

OBJECT OF THE VERB or OBJECT OF THE PREPOSITION or OBJECT OF ONE'S AFFECTION

    The NOMINATIVE CASE is used when the pronoun is the subject or the predicate nominative in a sentence.  Unless you've skipped a suspension's worth of days from high school (not that that's a bad thing), you know that.  Oh, but when the pronoun is the object , the object of the preposition, the object of a proposition, or the victim of the usual semantic abuses, then of course the OBJECTIVE CASE is used, thusly:

    When a pronoun is the object of a verb or object of a preposition, change "-ing" pronouns to "-ink" (singular), or "-inks" (pleural). 

   "-ang," "-ung," "-ong," etc., is changed to "-ank," "-unk," "-onk," etc.

 
SINGULAR PLEURAL
me ~nk us ~nks
you y~nk you (y'all if from South, youse if from Joisey) y~nks
him t~nk them t~ngs
her s~nk s~nks
it r~nk r~nks
"????" st~nk "them" st~nks
 
Examples:
 
I did him Ang dang rank
I do her Ing ding sink
 


THIS THAT THESE DAMN THOSE................as themselves!
 
NOMINATIVE OBJECTIVE
this diz diz~nk
that  dat dat~nk
these deez deez~nks
damn dam damnittohell
those dooz dooz~nks
 
All pronouns are malleable.  See ADVANCED DiLINGO



POSSESSION--  duplicated on ADJECTIVES page.

Possession is indicated by the firesign suffix -~g~mm~ng*
The following examples use various grungers of tense.

 
SINGULAR PLURAL
my ingigimming our ingsigimming
your yangagammang your  yangsagammang
his tungugummung theirs tungsugummung
her songogommong songsogommong
its ringigimming ringsigimming
????'s stingigimming "theirs" stingsigimming

 
NOTE: the suffix "-~g~mm~ng" also determines the possessive in nouns.

*A "gimme" firesign


Back to HomePage