I arrived before her. Here her is what noun case?
Answers
Answer:
When we use here, it typically refers to the place where the speaker is, and we see the position of people and things from the speaker’s point of view:
Do you want to stay here or go to another restaurant?
Could you come here and help me for a minute?
When we use there, it typically refers to the place where the listener or another person is, and we see the position of people and things from the listener’s or another person’s point of view:
Our son Jim’s living in Barcelona. He wants us to go there for a holiday.
A:
Where’s my cup of tea?
B:
It’s there, next to you, on the little table!
Here and there with this, that, these, those (demonstratives)
We often use here with nouns that have this or these before them, and there with nouns that have that or those before them:
Are these shoes here yours?
You press that button there and the motor should start.
Here and there with bring and take
We often use here with bring and there with take:
Bring your glass here and I’ll give you some juice.
This package has to go to the post room. Would you take it there for me, please?
See also:
Bring, take and fetch
Go and, come and
Here and there after prepositions
We can use here and there after prepositions:
Is there a bank around here?
It’s cold in here. Shut that door!
A:
Where shall I put this box of books?
B:
Oh, put it over there, please, by the bookshelf.
Here and there in front position
We can use here and there in front position, with the subject and verb inverted. The most common expressions of this type are here is x, here comes x, there is x, there goes x:
A:
Here’s the CD I said I’d lend you, the Brazilian music.
B:
Oh, thanks.
Here comes your taxi, so we’d better say bye bye now.
[pointing to a shop across the street]
There’s the shop where I bought those black shoes you liked.
Oh look, there goes Freda on a bike. I didn’t know she had one!
When the subject is a pronoun, we do not invert the subject and verb: