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Published byJane Thornton Modified over 9 years ago
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Pronouns come in many different varieties. Pronouns take the place of nouns.
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singularplural 1 st person Personal nominative pronouns (also known as subject pronouns)--used as the subject of the sentence also known as subjective case I you he, she, itthey you we 2 nd person 3 rd person
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singularplural Personal objective pronouns--used as direct objects, indirect objects, or objects of prepositions me you him, her, itthem you us 2 nd person 3 rd person
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singularplural 1 st person Possessive pronouns—used to show ownership or relationship mine yours his, hers, its theirs yours ours 2 nd person 3 rd person *Use these alone. Don't use them with nouns or noun phrases.
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REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS 1 st personmyself, ourselves 2 nd personyourself, yourselves 3 rd personhimself, herself, itself, themselves Hisself and theirselves are incorrect and should NEVER be used!
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demonstrative pronouns—point out a particular person, place, thing, or idea
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! Example: This is my dog Penny. Example: That is my dog Guinness.
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INTERROGATIVEPRONOUNS -These pronouns are used to introduce questions. -Who? -What? -Which? -Whose? -Where?
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indefinite pronouns These pronouns replace nouns that are not specifically named.
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SINGULAR INDEFINITE PRONOUNS another anybody anyone anything either everybody everyone everything neither nobody no one nothing somebody someone something each much one
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PLURAL INDEFINITE PRONOUNS both few many several
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INDEFINITE PRONOUNS SINGULAR OR PLURAL all any most none some
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What is an antecedent, and what does it have to do with pronouns? An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces.
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Junior took his dog to the pet store and bought her a treat. He bought it because he loves her.
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