Pronouns

English Subject Pronouns: I, You, He, She, It, We, They

Level A1 Pronouns
Key idea

Subject pronouns tell us who or what is doing the action in a sentence, and English has seven of them: I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. Use them at the start of a sentence, right before the verb, as in "I am a student." or "They live here." Remember that "you" works for both one person and many people, and "it" stands in for things and animals, as in "It is cold today." One golden rule: every English sentence needs a subject, and the word "I" is always capitalized.

Examples

  • I am a student. the speaker is a student
  • It is cold today. describing the weather
  • They live here. more than one person lives here

The full lesson

Everything in the video, in text.

  1. I · you · he · she · it · we · they

    seven little words every sentence needs

    Is raining. Am tired. In English, that's wrong — every single sentence needs a subject.

  2. 👤

    Every English sentence needs a subject.

    Many languages let you drop the subject. English never does — you always need a word naming who acts.

  3. The seven subject pronouns

    Singular
    • I
    • you
    • he / she / it
    Plural
    • we
    • you
    • they

    There are exactly seven, split by number. Singular: I, you, he, she, it. Plural: we, you, they.

  4. I am a student.

    'I' is always capitalised

    Start with yourself. I — and in English it's always written with a capital letter. I am a student.

  5. You are my friend.

    'you' = one person here

    You is the person you're speaking to. You are my friend.

  6. You are all welcome.

    'you' = many here — same word

    And the very same you works for a whole group — one or many. You are all welcome.

  7. She is a doctor.

    he = a man · she = a woman

    For other people: he for a man, she for a woman. She is a doctor.

  8. It is on the table.

    'it' = things & animals

    It covers things and animals — anything you wouldn't call he or she. It is on the table.

  9. It is cold today.

    'it' fills the empty subject

    And here's the clever one. English uses it even when it points to nothing — like the weather. The subject slot still has to be filled. It is cold today.

  10. We live here.

    'we' includes you

    We is you and at least one other person — yourself included. We live here.

  11. They live here.

    'they' = others, not you

    And they is a group that doesn't include you. They live here.

  12. Is raining. no subject
    It is raining. subject required

    English always needs a stated subject.

    Here's the big trap. Other languages just say Is raining. English has to say It is raining — always give the verb a subject.

  13. i am tired. lowercase i
    I am tired. always capital I

    The pronoun 'I' is always capitalised.

    And in writing, the word I is always a capital letter — never lowercase, even in the middle of a sentence.

  14. Remember

    • I, you, he, she, it, we, they
    • 'you' = one or many · 'it' = things & weather
    • Every sentence needs a subject

    So: I, you, he, she, it, we, they. You is one or many, it even covers the weather, and every sentence needs a subject.