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Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show. Press the enter key to view each part of the review.
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Pronouns Grade Seven
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Definition A pronoun takes the place of a noun. That means it can replace a person, place, thing, or idea. Ex. Mark could be replaced by “he” or “him.”
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Definition An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces. Ex. Mark gave his lunch money to Joe. (The pronoun is “his.” “His” is replacing Mark; therefore, “Mark” is the antecedent.)
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Definition First person means the person being spoken to. Ex. I am Bob. “I” is speaking in the sentence; therefore, “I” is a first person pronoun. Other first person pronouns are: we, me, us, my, mine, our, ours, myself, ourselves
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Definition Second person means the person being spoken to. Ex. I saw you at the party. The person, “you” is being spoken to; therefore, “you” is a second person pronoun. Other second person pronouns are: your, yours, yourself, yourselves
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Definition Third person pronouns are being spoken about. Ex. He gave Mary a book. (“He” is being talked about; therefore, “he” is a third person pronoun.) Other third person pronouns are: she, it, they, her, him, them, his, hers, its, their, theirs, himself, herself, itself, themselves.
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Qualities of Pronouns Person (first person, second person, third person) Number (singular, plural)
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Cases of Pronouns
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Nominative Pronouns SP 1st 2nd 3rd I you he, she, it we you they
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Objective Pronouns SP 1st 2nd 3rd me you him, her, it us you them
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Possessive Pronouns SP 1st 2nd 3rd my, mine your, yours his, her, hers, its our, ours your, yours their, theirs
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Compound Personal Pronouns SP 1st 2nd 3rd myself yourself himself, herself, itself ourselves yourselves themselves
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Types of Pronouns
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Personal Pronouns Personal pronouns are found in the Nominative, Objective, Possessive, and Compound Personal charts
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Demonstrative Pronouns Demonstrative pronouns refer to distance. There are four: –this –that –these –those This and these refer to things that are near. That and those refer to things that are far.
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Interrogative Pronouns Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions. There are five: –Who ? –Whom ? –Whose ? –Which ? –What ?
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Indefinite Pronouns Indefinite pronouns do not refer to specific items. There are twenty-six: –any, anyone, anybody, anything, another –some, someone, somebody, something –none, nothing, nobody, no one –everyone, everybody, everything –all, both, few, little, many, much, most, one, other, several
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Distributive Pronouns Distributive pronouns refer to things separately There are three: –each –either –neither
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This completes the review of the chapter of pronouns. For additional review, see Mrs. Frow in 106 or Mrs. Geer in the library for the pronoun review folder.
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