The wonderful world of PRONOUNS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pronoun Notes Parts of Speech.
Advertisements

Subject Possessive pronoun adjective
English IV At home… Unit 8. Use Whose… ? and mine, yours, his, hers, etc. Order of adjectives before nouns and the pronouns one and ones. Use Do you mind…
ADVERB CLAUSES Answer questions like: When? Where? Why? Under what circumstances?
PRONOUNS LESSON 1. WHAT IS A PRONOUN? Pronouns take the place of nouns to name persons, places, things, or ideas.
Pronouns In this lesson we will learn about: Personal pronouns
QUESTIONS? INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS. Interrogative Pronoun who…it’s a matter of case? The pronoun Who The pronoun who usually refers only to persons.
Focus On Grammar Book 2, 5 th edition Lesson 11: Adjective Clauses!!!!
Adjective Clauses - 1 An adjective clause: a dependent clause that modifies a noun. It is also called a relative clause. Using Subject Pronouns: Who, Which,
ADJECTIVES Definition: words that describes or modifies a noun (person, place, or thing) Answers the questions: – What kind? – How many? – Which one?
By Lilian Marchesoni. Whose...? = Who does is it belong to? Whose + singular / plural noun + be + pronoun? Whose teddy bear is that? Whose books are those?
Pronouns.
Unit 30 Subject Relative Clauses (Adjective Clauses with Subject Relative Pronouns)
15-1Possessive nounsPossessive nouns 15-2Possessive: irregular plural nounsPossessive: irregular plural nouns 15-3Possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his,
Personal Pronouns Personal Pronouns. WHAT ARE PERSONAL PRONOUNS? THEY WORK AS SUBJECTS REPLACE THE NAME OF A PERSON CAN BE OBJECTS EXAMPLE I AM A STUDENT.
Personal pronouns. Subject and object pronouns I me I am lost. Can you help me? I want you to go with me. An object pronoun comes after a verb or a preposition.
Parts of Speech: Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun. Subjective Pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence. Include words.
PERSONAL PRONOUNS, POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS AND POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES.
Grammar Fix Part 1. Pronouns What are they? Words that take the place of a noun How many can you think of? There are many, but they fall in to Five main.
Pronouns Chapter 8 English Grammar. Correct errors in pronoun usage: My friends and I ordered Indian food at the restaurant. I wasn’t very hungry, but.
Subjective Case Objective Case Possessive Form used before a Noun Possessive Form used Independently I me my mine you your.
Adjective Clauses Thomas Prime 5 – Unit 2. Adjective Clauses A clause is a group of words containing a subject and a verb. What is an adjective clause.
Personal Pronouns Practice. I I have a lovely cat It is ….. cat It is my cat Give it back to … Give it back to me Because it is ……. !!! Because it is.
Chapter 12 Adjective Clauses.
Pronoun Cases. Subjective pronouns – These words take the place of nouns or other pronouns and work as the subject of a verb. The person or object referred.
Pronouns and Antecedents
A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun or a noun phrase.
Los Paises Hispanohablantes. What countries speak Spanish?
By: Kayla Rayborn PRONOUN CASE NOTES. PERSONAL PRONOUNS: Personal pronouns have 3 cases -nominative -objective -possessive.
Personal Pronouns and Possessives
PRONOUNS. Without pronouns Steve said Steve needed the calculator Steve purchased if Steve was going to complete Steve’s assignment on time. With pronouns.
Adjective Clauses. Can you find Josh? Can you find Josh’s dad? He is the boy who is wearing shorts. He is the man who is wearing a blue hat.
Word Class Noun Paul, paper, speech, playVerb talk, become, likeAdjective young, dark, cheerfulAdverb carefully, quietly, warmly.
ENGLISH III RELATIVE PRONOUNS. Relative Pronouns A relative pronoun is a pronoun that introduces a relative clause. It is called a "relative" pronoun.
Student’s name:. This is your fist day of class, and your teacher asks you to talk about your family. ACTIVITY. Talk about your family members by using.
Pronouns. Subject Pronouns Take the place of a noun that is used as the subject of the sentence. They are found at the beginning of a phrase or clause.
Chapter 8: Using Pronouns (Part 1) English II
Pronouns & Possessive Forms. SUBJECT PRONOUNS OBJECT PRONOUNS POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS I You He She It We You They.
PRONOUNS A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun. The noun being replaced is called the antecedent. Ex. He sneezed. (John sneezed.) George.
Who/whom would I even ask? Who/whom cares?
GRAMMAR GAME Use your markers and white boards to answer the questions!
Direct and Indirect objects
Slide shows for use with PowerPoint presentation software
ADJECTIVE CLAUSE.
Complements– who needs them?
Possessive Pronouns
Притяжательные местоимения Possessive Pronouns (ТЕСТ для Proclass)
Pronoun Notes.
Personal Pronouns PRONOUN - Takes the place of a noun
8C possessive pronouns Whose coat is it? It’s my coat. It’s mine.
NOUNS person, place, thing, or idea
PRONOUN CASE NINTH GRADE ENGLISH.
Personal Pronouns PRONOUN - Takes the place of a noun
The Indirect Object.
Determiners By: - Mr. Nityanandesh Narayan Tripathi (PGT English)
Personal Pronouns PRONOUN - Takes the place of a noun
Pronoun Notes Parts of Speech 1.
11 Pronouns A pronoun is a word that is used in place of a noun.
Pronoun Notes Parts of Speech.
Word list.
Personal Pronouns Possessive Adjectives & Possessive Pronouns
OBJECT PRONOUNS.
Who vs. Whom.
Personal and Possessive Pronouns
POSSESSIVE  ´S SINGULAR NOUNS PLURAL NOUNS
PRONOUN NOTES - SECTION #7
In The Name Of Allah Blessing On The Prophet.
Direct and Indirect Objects
Especially: Dependent Clauses
Adjectives p
Presentation transcript:

The wonderful world of PRONOUNS

SUBJECT PRONOUNS They are always the subject.

OBJECT PRONOUNS They are always the object (direct and indirect) The boy gave me flowers. I love her a lot. INDIRECT DIRECT DIRECT

POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS We use them to talk about possessions. We use WHOSE… to ask about them. Whose class is it? It’s Aina’s class. A: Can I use your phone? B: It’s not mine. It’s Aina’s phone. A: Whose pen is it? Can I borrow it? B: It’s hers. You need to ask Aina.

POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES They work as an adjective. They modify the noun following it in order to show possession. This is my pen. This is a yellow pen. This is her book. This is a nice book. This is our bus. This is the next bus.