The nominative of address is used when directly addressing someone by name or title in a sentence, such as "John, can you help me?" or "Doctor, please see to the patient." It is a form of noun or pronoun that shows to whom or what the action of the verb is directed.
"Girl" certainly could be a simple subject, as in the sentence "That girl is beautiful." Like most nouns, however, "girl" could also be an "object" of a transitive verb, an infinitive, a participle, a gerund, or a preposition; or "girl" could be an "appositive", a "nominative of address", a "predicate nominative", or a "nominative absolute".
A nominative pronoun is the subject of a sentence. Examples of nominative pronouns are she, they, you, it, and he. A nominative case is the subject of the verb such as, he in the sentence "He eats pie."
A noun can be used in a sentence as the subject of the sentence or of a clause within the sentence, as the object or indirect object of a transitive verb or its present participle used as a gerund in the sentence, as the objective complement (or predicate nominative) of a linking verb or its gerund, as the object of a preposition, as the subject or object of an infinitive, as a nominative of address, as an appositive, or as a nominative absolute.
She/he is not a nominative pronoun. "She" and "he" are subjective or nominative pronouns, used as the subject of a sentence.
Nominative Case The nominative case is the form of a noun or pronoun used in the subject or predicate nominative. In English this is significant only with personal pronouns and the forms of who. Personal pronouns in the nominative case in modern English are I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. The word who is also in the nominative case.
The nominative personal pronouns are: I, you, we, he, she, it, and they. The nominative relative/interrogative pronoun is: who All other pronouns are objective or can used for both functions.
The nominative case is typically used for the subject of a sentence or the predicate nominative, which identifies the subject. In English, the pronouns "I," "he," "she," "we," and "they" are examples of nominative case pronouns.
The types of pronouns, whether nominative, objective or possessive, are first, second and third person, singular and plural, masculine, feminine and neutral. Nominative first person singular: I Nominative first person plural: we Second person: you Nominative third person singular masculine: he Nominative third person singular feminine: she Nominative third person singular neutral: it Nominative third person plural: they
singular is tu (nominative) plural is vos (nominative or accusative)
No, the word "him" is an objective pronoun, not a nominative pronoun. Nominative pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence, while objective pronouns are used as the object of a verb or preposition.
The word "He" is the nominative case pronoun in the sentence "He is the author of the novel." Nominative case pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence.