| First person | ||
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nom. | I | we |
| Poss. | my, mine | our, ours |
| Obj. | me | us |
Second person | ||
| Nom. | you (thou) | you (ye) |
| Poss. | your, yours (thy, thine) | your, yours |
| Obj. | you (thee) | you |
In modern usage you is used for both the singular and the plural, but the verb that goes with you is always plural.
| Third person | ||||
| Singular | Plural | |||
| Masc. | Fem. | Neut. | ||
| Nom. | he | she | it | they |
| Poss. | his | her, hers | its | their, theirs |
| Obj. | him | her | it | them |
Note.—The forms mine, thine, yours, hers, ours, theirs, and sometimes his are possessive case in form, but nominative or objective case in use. That pencil is mine really means, That pencil is my pencil. Mine is used as a substitute for a possessive pronoun and the noun it modifies.
The personal pronouns compounded with self are of two kinds:
1. Emphatic pronouns; as,
The buyer himself told me.
2. Reflexive pronouns, referring back to the subject and at the same time being in the objective case; as,
John slipped and hurt himself.