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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.

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Presentation on theme: "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."— Presentation transcript:

1 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.

2 Personal Pronouns Three groups First person Second person Third person

3 First Person Pronouns This is the person speaking: Singular: I, me, my, mine Plural: we, us, our, ours Example: Mr. Victor often says that he wants all of us to try and do our very best.

4 Second Person Pronouns The person spoken to: Singular: you, your, yours Plural: you, your, yours Example: The waiter asked, “Would you like to take home your leftovers?”

5 Third Person Pronouns The person or thing spoken about: Singular: he, him, his, she, her, hers, it, its Plural: they, them, their, theirs Example: Didn’t Mr. Victor get one of his degrees from Florida State University?

6 Reflexive or Intensive Pronouns These pronouns are created by adding -self or –selves to some personal pronouns. Singular: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself Plural: ourselves, yourselves, themselves Example: Mrs. Herbert excused herself from the meeting because she had to go pick up her children.

7 Indefinite Pronouns These pronouns refer to unnamed people or things and do not have definite antecedents like personal pronouns (you is sometimes an indefinite pronoun as the first word in a sentence allbothfewno one eachmanyanyeither Example: No one knew the answer, but a few tried. You must explain it to me.

8 Demonstrative Pronouns These pronouns are used to point out specific people, places or things. thisthatthesethose Example: When someone shouted out, “She’s Fat,” the teacher said, “Please do not use comments like those in my room.”

9 Interrogative Pronouns These pronouns are used to ask questions. whatwhichwho whosewhom Example: Who is going to become this week’s “Student of the Week?”

10 Relative Pronouns These pronouns relate a noun or adjective clause to its antecedent. whowhomwhose whichthat Example: Mr. Victor, who is tall and scary, speaks with a very loud voice.

11 Reciprocal Pronouns These pronouns refer to individual parts of a plural antecedent. each otherone another Example: Julie and Stacy were friends last week, and now they are spreading rumors about each other.


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