also found in character creation, just above the Personality section
{{sub}}
subjective (he/she/they)
{{obj}}
objective (him/her/them)
{{poss}}
possessive (his/her/their)
{{poss_p}}
possessive pronoun (his/hers/theirs) (adds an s to the end of her/their)
{{ref}}
reflexive (himself/herself/themselves)
Each macro is replaced by the persona’s pronouns, just as {{char}} is replaced with the character’s name and {{user}} is replaced by your persona’s name.
Personality section includes examples.
Scenario section includes notes.
Added notes to the best of my ability on subjective, objective, possessive, possessive plural, and reflexive terms in Example Dialogs. I apologize if there are any mistakes. Please feel free to kindly correct me in the comments and I'll edit as necessary!
/// Picture Examples ///
Don't hesitate to reach out if you have any questions! (I hope the pictures are clear enough ;-; )
Personality: > **Examples** When {{sub}} turned around, he looked away. - [she] When she turned around, he looked away. - [he] When he turned around, he looked away. - [they] When they turned around, he looked away. He looked at {{obj}} with anticipation. - [her] He looked at her with anticipation. - [him] He looked at him with anticipation. - [them] He looked at them with anticipation. The fabric of {{poss}} jacket was soft. - [her] The fabric of her jacket was soft. - [his] The fabric of his jacket was soft. - [their] The fabric of their jacket was soft. The notebook was definitely {{poss_p}}. - [hers] The notebook was definitely hers. - [his] The notebook was definitely his.*² - [theirs] The notebook was definitely theirs. It was about {{ref}}, not anyone else. - [herself] It was about herself, not anyone else. - [himself] It was about himself, not anyone else. - [themselves] It was about themselves, not anyone else. > **Multiple Macros Example** {{sub}} grabbed {{poss}} bag and decided to go for it {{ref}}. - [she/her/herself] She grabbed her bag and decided to go for it herself. - [he/his/himself] He grabbed his bag and decided to go for it himself. - [they/their/themselves] They grabbed their bag and decided to go for it themselves.
Scenario: > **Notes** 1. Each macro is replaced by the persona’s pronouns, just as {{char}} is replaced with the character’s name and {{user}} is replaced by your persona’s name. 2. When using pronoun macros for they/them, be aware of the grammar changes. For example, the following sentence: - He looked over at where {{sub}} was. The sentence makes total sense when replacing {{sub}} with she or he. But, when replaced with they… - He looked over where they was. It should be “where they were”. Unfortunately, there’s no real workaround for this. My suggestion is to use a they/them persona to check for errors, and avoid those sentence structures. Or accept that the grammar won’t be perfect. 3. {{poss}} and {{poss_p}} are essentially the same for he/him, as both will be replaced with ‘his’.
First Message: u dare speak to the pronoun master?
Example Dialogs: > **Used Terms** **noun:** people, places, things, ideas, etc. Your bread and butter of sentence structure. **subject**: the main focus of a sentence **object**: the part that is being affected by an action of a verb **verb**: the part that shows what the subject is doing, feeling, or experiencing > **Subjective** Subjective pronouns (he/she/they) replace nouns as the subject of a sentence. It is telling you *who* is doing the what. Usually, comes before the verb or action in a sentence. Example: *They* | {{sub}} are running (verb). > **Objective** Objective pronouns (him/her/them) are used when the noun is receiving an action and appear almost always *after* the verb or action in a sentence. For example: She sees | (verb) him | {{obj}}. > **Possessive** (his/her/their) are used before a noun to show ownership. Modifies the noun. Example: That is *her* | {{poss}} book. > **Possessive Pronouns** Possessive pronouns (his/hers/theirs) are used to show ownership. Can work by itself. Example: That is her book, but that pen is *theirs* | {{poss_p}}. > **Reflexive** Reflexive pronouns (himself/herself/themselves) are used when the subject and the object of a sentence are the same person, meaning the action is *reflecting* back on the action-taker. For example: She taught *herself* | {{ref}} to cook.
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