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In some special cases the full and the short forms of the object pronouns can be used together.
Other languages divide object pronouns into a larger variety of classes.
Note the use of n to denote the direct object pronoun "it."
With one exception, subject and object pronouns are identical.
This object pronoun variation is studied in detail by .
Direct and indirect object pronouns also agree in person, number, gender, and case.
Some verbs allow the object pronoun to be omitted.
In this case, the third person direct object pronoun "it" is represented by the suffix n.
Subject and object pronouns usually take the form of affixes that attach to the verb.
But in Portugal an object pronoun would never be placed at the start of a sentence, like in the second example.
These verbs are followed by a to-infinitive only in the passive or with an object pronoun.
Doubling of objects with an additional object pronoun (as in Bulgarian)
The unstressed object pronouns are used with the present-tense forms of verbs.
Some object pronouns take the form of suffixes attached to the verb:
This is to avoid the misinterpretation of the se as being an indirect object pronoun.
The object pronouns, as the name shows, bear the function of the object (direct or indirect).
In Portuguese object pronouns are often omitted.
It is a null subject language, with a tendency to drop object pronouns as well, in colloquial varieties.
Object pronouns are used when the person or thing is the object of the sentence or clause.
Generally, an object pronoun or a conjugated preposition stands at the end of a sentence in Irish.
Object pronouns have the same form as subject pronouns:
In some languages, subject or object pronouns can be dropped in certain situations (see Pro-drop language).
The object pronouns are used in place of subject pronouns when the subject is being emphasized.
Direct and indirect object pronouns.
In particular, subject pronouns are often omitted, and object pronouns usually precede the verb.