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Published byShon Dorsey Modified over 9 years ago
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PRONOUNS AND HOW TO USE THEM CORRECTLY
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PRONOUNS PART 1 Nominative Objective Possesive
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PRONOUN NOMINATIVE CASE SingularPlural First PersonIwe Second Personyouyou Third Personhe, she, itthey
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NOMINATIVE PRONOUNS - SUBJECT I went on a trip. He came along. When the pronoun follows a “to be” verb, use the nominative form. It was she. It is I. This is she.
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PRONOUN OBJECTIVE CASE SingularPlural First Personmeus Second Personyouyou Third Personhim, her, itthem
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OBJECTIVE PRONOUNS The group found me after a long search. The stranger gave us a treasure map. I climbed the mountain with him.
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OBJECTIVE TEST Substitute Ben and (I, me) explored the outback. I explored or me explored Erin went with Ben and (I or me). Erin went with I or Erin went with me.
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PRONOUN POSSESIVE CASE SingularPlural First Personmy, mineour, ours Second Personyour, youryour, yours Third Personhis, her, hers, itstheir, theirs
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POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS VS. NOUN AND VERB Its – possessive It’s – It is Their – possessive They’re – They are
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PRONOUNS PART 2 Who and Whom
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WHO AND WHOM Nominativewho, whoever Objectivewhom, whomever
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WHO AND WHOM Nominativewho, whoever If the pronoun is the subject or refers to the subject, use who
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WHO AND WHOM Objectivewhom, whomever If the pronoun is the object or refers to the object, use whom
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WHO OR WHOM IN A QUESTION Determine if the pronoun is the subject or object of the sentence. Subject – who Object - whom
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PRONOUNS PART 3 Agreement with Antecedents
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PRONOUN ANTECEDENT AGREEMENT Number – if the antecedent is singular, the pronoun is singular Joe bought the books and threw (it or them) under his bed. Gender – if the antecedent is masculine, the pronoun is masculine Joe bought the books because (he or she)needed them for class.
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PRONOUNS PART 4 Indefinite Pronouns
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INDEFINITE PRONOUNS Always singular: anothereacheverything one anybodyeitherneither somebody anyoneeverybodynobody someone anythingeveryoneno one
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INDEFINITE PRONOUNS Always plural: bothfewmanyseveral
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INDEFINITE PRONOUNS Singular or plural: allmostnonesomeany
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