1. I
2. You
3. They
In first person, the sentence describes things from the viewpoint of the person speaking. e.g., I went to the store.
In second person, the the sentence describes things from the viewpoint of the person being spoken to. e.g., You went to the store.
In third person, the sentence describes things from a neutral viewpoint e.g., They went to the store.
2006-12-02 03:21:28
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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First person ; I, Me, Myself
Second person : You
Third person : He, She, It
2006-12-02 11:24:25
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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They're the same as in any other languages. I will give you this chart of the word "to be" in the present tense, although it can be applied to all tenses.
First person singular: I am
First person plural: We are
Second singular: You are
Second plural: Y'all are
Third singular: He/She/It is
Third plural: They are
Or to put it more simply:
1st: I
2nd: You
3rd: S/he
2006-12-02 11:25:21
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answer #3
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answered by Halcyon 4
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First person deals with yourself: I, me, myself.
Second person deals with the person you are talking directly to: You, yourself, you-all
Third person deals with the person(s) you are talking about: Them, he, she, her, his,
Each one refers to a greater and greater distance. The nearest is yourself, then the next nearest is the person you are directly speaking to, and finally the most distance are all those other people you talk about.
2006-12-02 11:30:08
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answer #4
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answered by Dr. D 7
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First person - - - - the speaker
Second person - - - - the person spoken to
third person - - - - the person spoken about
2006-12-02 11:27:42
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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First person, the person talks about them self with "I"
Second is about someone else with "they" and "them"
third is about themselves again but calling themself by their name. ie "Gina went to the park" but I am Gina
[edit]
Ordinary English has seven personal pronouns: first-person singular (I), first-person plural (we), second-person (you), third-person singular masculine (he), third-person singular feminine (she), third-person singular neuter (it), and third-person plural (they).
2006-12-02 11:22:25
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answer #6
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answered by sweet_g_grl 4
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here is an example of this phrase: 'taylor hit jimmy on the head with a book.'
first person: (jimmy) 'taylor hit me on the head with a book.'
first person: (taylor) 'I hit jimmy on the head with a book.'
I do not know 2nd person.
third person: (bystander) 'Taylor hit Jimmy on the head with a book!'
2006-12-02 11:21:35
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answer #7
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answered by the golden goose 3
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First person = "I"
Second person = "We"
Thrid person = "They"
2006-12-02 11:24:26
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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who was on first...
i don't know was on third.
what was on second i think...?
2006-12-02 11:21:24
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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