Pronouns
Pronouns
Pronouns
He
We
We
Us
Sh
e
Definition
"Pronoun" is the sentence
element used to replace a
noun, or a noun equivalent
construction. The replaced
noun is named the
"."antecedent
CATEGORIE
S OF
PRONOUNS
Syntactically, pronouns
have the same functions as
nouns do; morphologically,
pronouns are used to avoid
repetition, and to
set/clarify nouns'
categories of number,
. person, and gender
PERSONAL
PRONOUN
personal pronouns
number
person
gender
subject
object
1st
male/fema
le
me
2nd
male/fema
le
you
you
male
he
him
female
she
her
neuter
it
it
1st
male/fema
le
we
us
2nd
male/fema
le
you
you
singular
3rd
plural
. I like coffee .John helped me ? Do you like coffee.John loves you . He runs fast?Did Ram beat him . She is clever?Does Mary know her . We went home.Anthony drove us . It doesn't work?Can the engineer repair it ? Do you need a table for three?Did John and Mary beat you at doubles. They played doublesJohn and Mary beat them -
Possessiv
e
Pronouns
singular
person
gender (of
"owner")
possessive
pronouns
1st
male/female
mine
2nd
male/female
yours
male
his
female
hers
1st
male/female
ours
2nd
male/female
yours
3rd
male/female/ne
uter
theirs
3rd
plural
:Examples
Look at these pictures. Mine is the bigone. (subject = My picture)
I like your flowers. Do you like mine?(object = my flowers)
All the essays were good but his was thebest. (subject = his essay)
John found his passport but Mary couldn'tfind hers. (object = her passport)
Singular
Plural
my
Used
your
before
nouns his, her,
its
mine
Used
yours
alone
our
your
their
ours
yours
theirs
his, hers,
its
REFLEXIVE
AND
EMPHATIC
PRONOUN
Definitio
ns
Reflexive pronoun is used with an active voiceverb in order to reflect the action of the verb
back on the subject--the antecedent.
-Emphatic pronoun accompanies its
antecedent in order to accentuate its
action/state.
-Reflexive and emphatic pronouns take
. different positions within the sentence structure
myself
yourself
himself, herself, itself
plural
ourselves
yourselves
themselves
. I saw myself in the mirror ?Why do you blame yourself . John sent himself a copy -
DEMONSTRATI
VE
PRONOUN
Demonstrative pronouns
and demonstrative
adjectives have exactly
the same forms. The way
to differentiate them
depends on their position
relative to the
Demonstrative pronouns
antecedent/determined
.THIS, THESE, THAT, THOSE
.nouns
THE FORMER, THE LATER
THE FIRST, THE LAST
THE OTHER,THE OTHERS
SAME
SUCH
SO
this
that
plural
these
those
ATTENTION
The word "that" has four main
functions:
1. demonstrative pronoun or
adjective:
That book is good.
2. relative pronoun:
Anything that you remember
could help a lot.
3. conjunction:
He said that he had been there
before.
4. adverb:
INTERROGATIV
E
PRONOUN
person
subject
object
who
whom
thing
what
person/thin
g
which
person
whose
possessi)
(ve
Examples
:
question
answer
Who told
? you
John told
. me
subject
Whom did
? you tell
. I told Mary
object
What's
? happened
An
accident's
. happened
subject
Relative
Pronouns
:Examples
The person who phoned me last.night is my teacher
The car which hit me was yellowThe person whom I phoned.last night is my teacher
The car, whose driver jumpedout just before the accident,
was completely destroyed
Reciproc
al
Pronouns
:When we use these reciprocal pronounsthere must be two or more people, things
or groups involved (so we cannot use
reciprocal pronouns with I, you [singular],
he/she/it), and
they must be doing the same thing
Examples
John
and Mary love each:
. other
The ten prisoners were all. blaming one another
Why don't you believe each?other
INDEFINITE
PRONOUN
An indefinite
pronoun does not
refer to any specific
person, thing or
amount. It is vague
and "not definite".
Some typical
indefinite pronouns
Plura
l
another
everybody
no one both
anybody
everyone
few
nothing
many
anyone
everything
one
others
anything
much
severa
somebody
l
each
neither
All,
any, most,
none and some
someone
can be singular or plural,
either
nobody
depending
on the phrase that
something
Reference
. :www.englishclub.com
-1
s
-2
.www.corollarytheorems.com
Taghreed Ahmed
Basabrain
3091116