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.
Short sentence . Make the sentence a thoughtful expression.
Sorry this came late, It would be I, I I, III.
Referring to the peom i will pronounce your name, i believe the answer is B. the savannah.
We can all see it in this line:
. . <span><em>And it resembles the savannah, that blossoms forth under the masculine </em><em>ardour</em><em> of the midday sun</em> . .
<em />The usage of the word savannah, masculine ardour, and the midday sun is associated with the African continent and local civil right movement to achieve equality.
</span>
It means that people look at the problem instead of the whole situtation as a whole.