 a word used in place of a noun  Kinds of Pronouns  Subject Pronouns  Object Pronouns  Possessive Pronouns  Personal Pronouns  Reflexive Pronouns.

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 a word used in place of a noun  Kinds of Pronouns  Subject Pronouns  Object Pronouns  Possessive Pronouns  Personal Pronouns  Reflexive Pronouns  Indefinite Pronouns

I WeYou He, She,ItThey Examples: He saw the ship. They are two years old.

 When a pronoun is used after linking verbs. Example: Great Friends were they.

SingularPlural meusyou him, her, itthem Examples: Please give me the ball. The dog hit it. Sarah showed them beautiful flowers. Many people worked for him.

Object pronouns used as direct objects, indirect objects and objects of a preposition. ***NEVER USE ME AS A SUBJECT PRONOUN. Dad and I are going to the zoo.

Singular Plural My, mine Our, ours Your, yours Yours, Your His, her, hers, Its Their, theirs Personal/Possessive pronouns are used as ADJECTIVES. Ex: The dog gave its bone to Bobby. His name is John.

 Myself, ourselves, yourself, yourselves, himself, herself, itself, themselves  Pronouns that end in – self and –selves  Mike gave himself a big raise.  Our guests served themselves dinner.  ***Remember: Reflexive Pronouns refer back to the subject. Intensive pronouns can be Appositives. I myself would not say that.

 All, another, any, anyone, both, each, everybody, everything, few, many, most, no one, some, several  Ex: Everyone brought his or her special dish to the party.  Some Indefinite pronouns can be both singular and plural.  Some Indefinite pronouns can be used as pronouns, nouns (Subjects) and adjectives.  Ex: All of the girls will be eating ice cream.  All of the food was great.  Several men went to the store on sale day.

Interrogative pronouns: who, whompeople whatthings whichto people or things whoseownership **Who is always used as subject or predicate pronoun. Ex: Who was that man? The winner was who?

Whom is always used as an object.  Whom did you call? “You did call whom”  You told whom our secret? “You told our secret to whom”  For whom did the caller ask? “The caller did ask for whom” **DON’T CONFUSE WHOSE FOR WHO’S. WHO’S IS A CONTRACTION FOR WHO IS. Who’s your friend?Whose name is it? Your friend is whoIt is whose name

- point out a person, place, thing or idea. - this, that, these and those Singular: This is mine. That is the right answer. Plural: These are my favorite books. Those are too small.

Sometimes a pronoun is followed directly by an appositive, a noun that identifies the pronoun. We skaters have rehearsal. The mayor praised us lifeguards.