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142. The Personal pronouns are as follows.

1st person: ego I,  nōs we

2nd person:  you,  vōs you (all)

The personal pronouns of the 3rd person—he, she, it, they—are wanting in Latin, a demonstrative being sometimes used instead.

143. Ego and are declined below.

Allen & Greenough: Latin 1st person singular and plural personal pronouns chart

a. The plural nōs is often used for the singular ego the plural vōs is never so used for the singular .

Note— Old forms are genitive mīs, tīs; accusative and ablative mēd, tēd (cf. § 43, Note 1)

b. The forms nostrum, vestrum, etc., are used partitively.

ūnusquisque nostrum each one of us
vestrum omnium of all of you

Note— The forms of the genitive of the personal pronouns are really the genitives of the possessives.

meī, tuī, suī, nostri, vestrī (genitive singular neuter)
nostrum, vestrum (genitive plural masculine or neuter)

So in early and later Latin we find ūna vestrārum one of you (women).

c. The Genitives meī, tuī, suī, nostri, vestrī are chiefly used objectively (§ 347).

memor sīs nostrī be mindful of us (me)
mē tuī pudet I am ashamed of you

d. Emphatic forms of are tūte and tūtemet (tūtimet). The other cases of the personal pronouns, excepting the genitive plural, are made emphatic by adding -met.

egomet
vōsmet

Note— Early emphatic forms are mēpte and tēpte.

e. Reduplicated forms are found in the accusative and ablative singular.

mēmē
tētē

f. The preposition cum (with) is joined enclitically with the ablative.

Tēcum loquitur. He talks with you.

Suggested Citation

Meagan Ayer, Allen and Greenough’s New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges. Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Dickinson College Commentaries, 2014. ISBN: 978-1-947822-04-7. https://dcc.dickinson.edu/ro/grammar/latin/personal-pronouns-paradigm