Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Or, well, although I find it hard to use the first person plural: our life.
Note that in the spoken language, this form is used for the first person plural.
The story is told by an anonymous narrator in the first person plural.
Despite the first person plural, some of the reactions described here cry out for psychological rather than social analysis.
I find this shift into the first person plural a bit alarming."
Then, shifting back into the first person plural, she added, "We're very lucky."
Marcus noted that the first person plural of the pardon had disappeared.
Creideiki was mildly surprised at the use of the first person plural.
And, now that he thought of it, Angus had consistently used the royal first person plural.
The first person plural refers to the speaker together with at least one other person.
He often talks about the Beats in the first person plural, referring to the group as "we" and "us".
'Why am I talking in first person plural?
The use of first person plural ("we" and "us") indicates that the articles may have been a collaborative effort.
There are no imperative forms for first person plural and second person formal.
They tend to speak in the first person plural ("Are we finished with the bread?")
The following examples use the first person plural of the present subjunctive:
When would the first person plural end?
"We share the essence of our lost sibling," Deanna said, falling into the first person plural once again.
Cohortative constructions can only be used in first person plural utterances.
He knows from the fact that she is using the first person plural that she thinks he's in need of help.
First person plural loses the s everywhere but in the North Western dialect.
Quechua has two first person plural pronouns ("we", in English).
The "we" passages in Acts, where the first person plural is used, point to the author being a companion of Paul.
"The ghost of Andrew Johnson speaks out, in the first person plural, against his recent bad press.
The second section makes almost exclusive use of the first person plural pronoun ('we', 'us' etc.).