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them
[them, thuhm, uhm]
pronoun
the objective case of plural they, used as a direct or indirect object.
We saw them yesterday. I gave them the books.
Informal., (used instead of the pronoun they in the predicate after the verbto be ): No, that isn’t them.
It's them, across the street.
No, that isn’t them.
Informal., (used instead of the pronoun their before a gerund).
The boys' parents objected to them hiking without adult supervision.
the objective case of singular they, used as a direct or indirect object.
(used to refer to a generic or unspecified person previously mentioned, about to be mentioned, or present in the immediate context): If an officer were to ask you that question directly, you would have to answer them honestly.
If you know anyone looking for a job, tell them to contact me.
If an officer were to ask you that question directly, you would have to answer them honestly.
(used to refer to a specific or known person previously mentioned, about to be mentioned, or present in the immediate context).
I can’t believe your ex took your cat with them when they moved out.
(used to refer to a nonbinary or gender-nonconforming person previously mentioned, about to be mentioned, or present in the immediate context).
Randi’s on vacation, so you can’t see them until next week.
adjective
Nonstandard., those.
He don't want them books.
them
/ ðəm, ðɛm /
pronoun
(objective) refers to things or people other than the speaker or people addressed
I'll kill them
what happened to them?
a dialect word for themselves
they got them a new vice president
determiner
a nonstandard word for those
three of them oranges
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of them1
Example Sentences
Some parts of the grove are steep and hard to access, making them difficult to treat.
There are three of them in the car, which does a U-turn right in front of ours - but we manage to hide our camera.
From parents' chats to tenants' groups, much of daily life runs through them.
"You have to make a lot of sacrifices to be a surgeon and family time is one of them," the father-of-two told me.
Writers, artists and other creative professionals have raised concerns that Anthropic and other tech companies are using their work to train their AI systems without their permission and not fairly compensating them.
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