Pronouns 6th grade Language Arts.

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Presentation transcript:

Pronouns 6th grade Language Arts

Pronouns Takes the place of a noun Replace a noun with a pronoun to avoid using the same nouns over and over and over and over…

Personal Pronouns Singular Subject Pronouns: I, You, He, She, It Plural Subject Pronouns: We, You, They Singular Object Pronouns: me, you, him, her, it Plural Object Pronouns: us, you, them -If a personal pronoun is used at the beginning of a sentence, it is called a SUBJECT pronoun (Also called nominative case) -If a personal pronoun is used later in the sentence as the object of another word, it is an OBJECT pronoun. Also called objective case.

Possessive Pronouns Just like possessive nouns, these show ownership of something else. (my, mine, his, hers, its (no apostrophe here!) your, yours, their, theirs, our, ours, etc

Demonstrative Pronouns Now we sing: Demonstrative, Demonstrative There are only 4: This and that, these and those, Believe me, there are no more! (These are used by themselves; not followed by a noun…see?)

Reflexive Pronouns This is a pronoun that REFLECTS the subject. It ALWAYS ends with -self or -selves. ex. When I looked in the mirror, I saw myself.

Indefinite Pronouns These refer to a nonspecific person, place, thing or idea. --both, anybody, someone, anyone, either, each, few, nothing, no one, everybody, several, others, much, each, etc.--

Interrogative Pronouns The question words, if the answer is a thing! (Who, Whose, Which, Where, When, What) These stand in for nouns you want to know the answer to Who stole my cookie? What is that? Which is my ducky?

Pronouns and Antecedents The noun that the pronoun replaces or refers to is called the antecedent. The bus lost its tire. (“its” refers to the bus, so bus is the antecedent) Maria’s mom wanted her to call. (who is “her”?– Maria is the antecedent for her)

The End