the odjective is very easy, what most swimmer want to do is improve there strokes and their times when they race. they go to swim practice and work with there coaches and become better.
To provide a place to swim where there is no lake or pond.
No, the personal pronoun 'they' is a subjective pronoun; a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The corresponding objective personal pronoun is them, a word that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:My friends and I are going swimming. They will pick me up. (subjective)I chose two kittens from the litter. I call them Jack and Jill. (objective)
"Whom did she say would meet us at the swimming pool."The pronouns in the sentence are:whom = Incorrect use of the objective interrogative pronoun. The correct subjective interrogative pronoun is 'who'.she = Correct use of the subjective personal pronoun as the subject of the verb 'say'.us = Correct use of the objective personal pronoun as the direct object of the verb 'meet'.
An objective clause is a clause which is like a learning objective but this is the objective for an clause
a predicate objective is a predicate that has an objective
An objective is a noun, but you can use objective as an adjective, in which case the superlative is - the most objective.
The singular objective pronouns are "me," "him," "her," and "it." The plural objective pronouns are "us," "them," and "it."
He went swimming in a swimming :)
I was swimmingWe were swimmingYou were swimmingHe/She/It was swimmingThey were swimming
the scan objective is the shortest objective ,, and has a magnification of 10x
The objective form of "she" is "her."
what is a objective stance