Pronoun Case Her smacked he.. Determining which form of a pronoun to use is a matter of determining how the pronoun is functioning in the sentence and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Advertisements

Rocking Pronouns Jeopardy
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun or pronoun. Your Name.
Pronouns.
SebaLuigi Production.  Pronouns are words that substitute for nouns.
Pronouns What are they?.
Pronouns Takes the place of a noun, and makes the sentence less repetitive or cumbersome.
Pronouns – Part One Grade Eight.
 A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns or pronouns.  The word that the pronoun refers to is called the antecedent.  There are.
Pronouns: subjective, objective and possessive case.
A pronoun is a word used in place of one or more nouns. Zac Lawrence Taylor Crowder.
Dr. Kenny. COPY THE FOLLOWING: It was (she, her) who came with us to the movies. (I, Me) gave into the pressure. All of us would rather be with (he, him)
Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show. Press the enter key to view each part of the review.
PRONOUNS. Definition A pronoun is a word, like he, she, or who, that replaces a noun in a sentence. There are many types of pronouns, including: Personal.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that is used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns. The antecedent of a pronoun is the word(s) that the pronoun stands.
Personal Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns. personal pronouns refer to people or things.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun.
 What are they?  Takes the place of a noun  Subject Pronouns?  Can be used as a subject of the sentence  I he, she, we, they, you, it.
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.
 a word used in place of a noun  Kinds of Pronouns  Subject Pronouns  Object Pronouns  Possessive Pronouns  Personal Pronouns  Reflexive Pronouns.
PRONOUNS HE, ONESELF, Somebody IT, They, I, That, My.
Pronouns. Pronoun– word that takes the place of a noun. He they me I.
Pronouns Kinds of Pronouns Subject Relative Object Interrogative Possessive Demonstrative Reflexive Intensive A pronoun is a word that is used in place.
 Slide 3: Pronoun Purpose  Slide 4: Personal & Possessive  Slide 5: Indefinite & Relative  Slide 6: Demonstrative & Interrogative  Slide 7: Reflexive.
A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun or a noun phrase.
WCH 502 Pronouns. What is a pronoun? A pronoun is a word that takes the place of or refers to a noun.
Verb + Object + Infinitive
The 8 Parts of Speech Pronouns.
Parts of Speech Pronouns. Basic Definition A pronoun is a word that is used in place of a noun or another pronoun. Most pronouns have an antecedent An.
Pronouns replace nouns Pronouns come in many different varieties.
Intensive & Reflexive Pronouns
Parts of Speech Part 1. NOUNS A noun is any word that names a person, place or thing.
Parts of Speech. Nouns: are words that name persons, places, things, or ideas.
Pronouns Types of Pronouns. Pronoun A word that takes the place of a noun.
Pronoun Review.
Word Class Noun Paul, paper, speech, playVerb talk, become, likeAdjective young, dark, cheerfulAdverb carefully, quietly, warmly.
Pronouns come in many different varieties. Pronouns take the place of nouns.
2 MINUTE CHALLENGE: What ’ s the word?. The Pronoun  A pronoun is used to substitute a noun (person or thing).  To decide if a word is a pronoun, you.
Pronouns. What is a pronoun?  A pronoun takes the place of a noun.  Pronouns can be used in the following ways: Subject Predicate noun or adjective.
PRONOUNS. Pronouns A pronoun is a word used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns. Example: Ask Dan if Dan has done Dan’s homework. Ask Dan if he.
Section 11. Case is that form of a noun or pronoun which marks its function in a sentence There are three cases: 1. Nominative 2. Objective 3. Possessive.
Pronouns Part 2. Possessive pronouns A possessive pronoun such as mine indicates possession. Mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs Possessive.
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.
Ch Pronoun Ch Pronoun © CENGAGE LEARNING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
ACLA Countdown  Check In  Leave your stuff in a stack on your desk!  Questions, song requests, etc. to the Parking Lot.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns. The noun the pronoun replaces or refers to is called the antecedent.
TEACHER’S INDENTITY Learning Outcomes 2. They will be able to uses of Pronouns. 1. About the classification of Pronouns. Students will be able to say:
Pronouns & Possessive Forms. SUBJECT PRONOUNS OBJECT PRONOUNS POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS I You He She It We You They.
Pronouns Definition: A word used in place of a noun or more than one noun. We use them to help make our speech less repetitive and awkward. ANTECEDENT:
Grammar Unit 1: Parts of Speech
LA Countdown Check In Collect your IAN Questions to the Parking Lot.
Pronouns.
P.A.V.P.A.N.I.C. P.O.S. Review Pronouns and Adverbs.
Pronouns.
Pronoun Notes.
Pronouns She I He Us We.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Personal Pronouns Parts of Speech 3.
Pronouns Pronoun: a word used in place of one or more nouns
4 Using Pronouns Nominative Case (I, You, he, she, it, we, you, they, who): use when the pronoun is the subject of a verb (even if it comes after the verb.
Pronouns Mrs. Smith.
Click HERE for intro video
Pronouns A word that takes the place of one or more than one noun. They show number and gender.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns.
Pronouns Cases and Usage Issues.
Pronouns.
Pronoun: a word that has taken the place of a noun
Presentation transcript:

Pronoun Case Her smacked he.

Determining which form of a pronoun to use is a matter of determining how the pronoun is functioning in the sentence and then putting it in the proper form. Is it a subject? An object? Indicating possession? Subject: Who/what is doing the action? Object: Who/what is being acted upon? (this can be direct or indirect object or the object of a preposition)

Finding subjects and objects Her smacked he. Subject: The one doing the action. Verb: The action Object: The one being acted upon.

Next… Once you have determined whether a pronoun is functioning as a subject or an object, put it in the proper form. Her smacked he. Becomes… She smacked him. Subject-- Nominative Form Object-- Objective Form

Pronoun Forms Nominative or Subjective: Used when pronoun is a subject. Objective: Used when pronoun is an object. Possessive: Used when the pronoun is indicating possession. Reflexive: Used in place of the objective when subject and object are identical.

Examples Nominative: Al and I are going to the circus. Objective: The bus will take Al and me to the circus. Possessive: My friend Al is going to the circus. (before noun) That Eggo is mine. (used alone) Reflexive: I brought myself to the circus.

Singular Pronoun Forms First Person: (n, o, p n p a, r) I, me, my mine, myself Second Person: You, you, your yours, yourself Third Person: He, him, his his, himself She, her, her hers, herself It, it, its its, itself

Plural Pronoun Forms First Person: We, us, our ours, ourselves Second Person: You, you, your yours, yourselves Third Person: They, them, their theirs, themselves

Special Cases Interrogative Pronoun: WHO Nominative: Who is going to the circus? Objective: With whom are you going? Possessive: Whose circus is better? (noun) Those pies are whose? (alone) Those pies are whose? (alone)

Special Cases Use the possessive form of a pronoun before a gerund. Gerund: Verb ending in –ing that functions as a noun Her juggling is masterful. She didn’t mind my asking about her training.

Incomplete Constructions A pronoun following than or as in an incomplete construction is the same case as it would be if the construction were completed. Examples: Inc: Jeff is better at baking than (she, her). Comp: Jeff is better at baking than (she, her) is. Inc: The odor upset me as much as (he, him). Comp: The odor upset me as much as it upset (he, him).

Practice Using different pronouns for each, write three sentences for each of the pronoun cases: NominativeObjectivePossessiveReflexive In your sentences be sure to demonstrate your understanding of gerunds and who/whom.