https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/all All with personal pronouns
When all refers to a personal pronoun which is the object in a clause, we can use pronoun + all or all of + pronoun. The pronoun is in the object form:
I used to have three pens but I’ve lost them all. (or … but I’ve lost all of them).
Not: … but I lost all them.
However, in short responses, all of must be used:
A:
How many of these boxes are you going to need?
B:
All of them.
Not: Them all.
We use all of with the object form of the pronoun, even when the pronoun is the subject in the clause:
All of us are hoping for good news. A long line of people waited to speak to the officer. All of them had a story to tell.
sexboy2025-05-16 08:28:44
主要原因係今日阿A問又澄清、聽日又輪到阿B問,咁咪好唔得閒?
我始終覺得要郁到BNO (British National Overseas),英國海外國民呢個機會唔係咁大。