A nominative case pronoun is a pronoun in its basic form, so: I, you, he/she/it, we, you, they. So, the correct answer is D, 'we' is a nominative case pronoun, that is, it has to be the subject of the sentence.
The other examples have only objective case pronouns: them, me, him - either used incorrectly, or as objects.
The first rhyming couplet of the poem "On Imagination" contains an inverted sentence: "Thy various works, imperial queen, we see, How bright their forms! how deck'd with pomp by thee!"
A misplaced modifier is <span>a phrase or clause placed awkwardly in a sentence</span>
The fascinators had the commands of working, playing and sleeping for eight hours a day printed under each of them. The idea was to systematize their lives and deprived them from the priviledge of thinking. There was a third of the day which had to be dedicated to the most basic activities in life.