* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download pronouns - Laing Middle School
Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup
Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup
American Sign Language grammar wikipedia , lookup
Tagalog grammar wikipedia , lookup
Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup
Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup
Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Zulu grammar wikipedia , lookup
Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup
Relative clause wikipedia , lookup
Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup
Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup
Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup
Sanskrit grammar wikipedia , lookup
Sloppy identity wikipedia , lookup
Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup
Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup
Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup
Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup
T–V distinction wikipedia , lookup
Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup
Arabic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Sotho parts of speech wikipedia , lookup
Contraction (grammar) wikipedia , lookup
Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Icelandic grammar wikipedia , lookup
French grammar wikipedia , lookup
Literary Welsh morphology wikipedia , lookup
Romanian nouns wikipedia , lookup
Bound variable pronoun wikipedia , lookup
Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup
PRONOUNS 1. What is a Pronoun? 2. Subject Pronouns 3. Object Pronouns 4. Possessive Pronouns 5. Reflective and Intensive Pronouns 6. Interrogatives and Demonstratives 7. Pronoun Agreement 8. Indefinite-Pronoun Agreement 9. Pronoun Problems 10.More Pronoun Problems WHAT IS A PRONOUN? Pronouns • A pronoun is a word that is used in place of a noun. A pronoun can refer to a person, place, thing, or idea. The word that a pronoun refers to is called the antecedent. Refers to Raymond visited Death Valley, and he was impressed. Personal pronouns • Pronouns such as we, I, he, them, and it are called personal pronouns. Personal pronouns have a variety of forms to indicate different persons, numbers, and cases. Person and Number • These are first-person, second-person and third-person personal pronouns, each having both singular and plural forms. Singular Plural I went out. We left early. You left too. You are leaving. He came by bus. They came by car. Case • Each personal pronoun has three cases: subject, object, and possessive. Which form to use depends on the pronouns function in a sentence. Subject: He read about Death Valley. Object: Julie asked him about the rocks. Possessive: Ramon brought his book. IDENTIFY THE PERSONAL PRONOUNS IN EACH SENTENCE... 1. Death Valley is famous for its strange moving boulders. 2. They are found in a dry lake bed called Racetrack Playa. 3. The rocks slide on their own, leaving long tracks behind them. 4. Can you think of an explanation for this curious event? 5. Investigators offer two major theories for us to consider. IDENTIFY THE PERSONAL PRONOUNS IN EACH SENTENCE... 6. One geologist thinks that when floodwater freezes, an ice sheet can form under a rock and help it slide. 7. Other scientists disagree with his theory. 8. They believe that the wind alone can move the rocks. 9. Some scientists have hedged their bets, telling us that both theories could be true. 10.We still don’t know for sure how the rocks move. SUBJECT PRONOUNS Subject Pronouns • A subject pronoun is used as a subject in a sentence. Singular Plural I We You You He, she, it They Pronouns as Subjects • Use a subject pronoun when the pronoun is a subject or part of a compound subject. You and he thought the movie was scary. He and I ate popcorn. OBJECT PRONOUNS Predicate Pronouns • A predicate pronoun follows a linking verb and identifies the verb’s subject. Use the subject case for predicate pronouns. identifies The owner was he. subject Predicate Pronoun Object Pronouns • An object pronoun is used as a direct object, an indirect object, or an object of a preposition. Singular Plural Me Us You You Him, her, it Them Direct Object • The pronoun receives the action of a verb and answers the question whom or what. Direct Object The mysterious death of king Tut fascinates me. Indirect Object • The pronoun tells to whom or what or for whom or what an action is performed. to Chu lent me a video on the topic. Indirect Object Direct Object Object of a Preposition • The pronoun follows a preposition (such as to, from, for, against, by, or about). We will save the video for you. preposition Object of a preposition POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS Possessive Pronouns • A possessive pronoun is a personal pronoun used to show ownership or relationship. Singular Plural My, mine Our, ours Your, yours Your, yours Her, hers, his, its Their, theirs The Chinese museum kept its amazing secret for years. No one saw the mummies in their colorful clothes. Then Professor Mair and his tour group arrived. REFLEXIVE AND INTENSIVE PRONOUNS Reflexive Pronouns • A reflexive pronoun refers to the subject and directs the action of the verb back to the subject. Reflexive pronouns are necessary to the meaning of a sentence. reflects Houdini called himself a master escape artist. Intensive Pronouns • An intensive pronoun emphasizes a noun or another pronoun in the same sentence. Intensive pronouns are not necessary to the meaning of a sentence. You yourselves have seen magic shows on TV. INTERROGATIVES AND DEMONSTRATIVES Interrogative Pronouns • An interrogative pronoun is used to introduce a question. Who made up this riddle? Interrogative Pronoun Use Who, whom Refers to people What Refers to things Which Refers to people or things Whose Indicates ownership or relationship Using Who and Whom • Who is always used a subject or predicate pronoun. Who knows the answer to the riddle? Your favorite comedian is who? • Whom is always used as an object. Whom did you tell? To whom did you give my name? Demonstrative Pronouns • A demonstrative pronoun points out a person, place, thing, or idea. This, that, these, and those. Singular Plural This is the game that we created. These are the rules. That is the spinner. Those are the playing pieces. PRONOUN AGREEMENT Pronoun Agreement • The antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces or refers to. The antecedent and the pronoun can be in the same sentence or in a different sentences. Refers to Louis writes his own detective stories. Replaces Agatha Christie writes mysteries. Her stories are famous. Agreement in Numbers • Use a singular pronoun to refer to a singular antecedent. One story has its setting in Egypt. • Use a plural pronoun to refer to a plural antecedent. The characters have their motives for murder. Agreement in Person • The pronoun must agree in person with the antecedent. 3rd person Louis likes his mysteries to have surprise endings. 2nd person You want a story to grab your attention. INDEFINITE-PRONOUN AGREEMENT Indefinite-Pronoun Agreement • An indefinite pronoun does not refer to a specific person, place, thing, or idea. Something unusual is going on in Loch Ness. Has anyone photographed the Loch Ness monster? Some indefinite pronouns are always singular, some are always plural, and some can be either singular or plural. Singular Plural Singluar or Plural Another Anybody Anyone Anything Each Either Everybody Everyone Everything Neither Nobody No one Nothing One Somebody Someone Something Both Few Many Several All Any Most None some Singular Indefinite Pronouns • Use a singular personal pronoun to refer to a singular indefinite pronoun. Refers to Everyone took his or her camera to the lake. Refers to One dropped his camera in the water. Plural Indefinite Pronouns • Use a plural personal pronoun to refer to a plural indefinite pronoun. Refers to Several reported their sightings of the monster. Refers to Many could not believe their own eyes! Singular or Plural Indefinite Pronouns • Some indefinite pronouns can be singular or plural. The phrase that follows the indefinite pronoun will often tell you whether the pronoun is singular or plural. Most of the monster story has its origin in Singular indefinite Singular personal fantasy. pronoun pronoun Most of the monster stories have their origins plural personal plural indefinite in fantasy. pronoun pronoun PRONOUN PROBLEMS Pronoun Problems – “We” and “Us” • The pronoun we or us is sometimes followed by a noun that identifies the pronoun. Use we when the pronoun is a subject or a predicate pronoun. Use us when the pronoun is an object. We owners don’t always understand our pets. subject Dogs and cats often surprise us owners. object Unclear Reference • Be sure that each personal pronoun refers clearly to only one person, place, or thing. • Confusing: Tony and Fred want to become veterinarians. He now works at an animal shelter (who works? Tony or Fred?) • Clear: Tony and Fred want to become veterinarians. Fred now works at an animal shelter. MORE PRONOUN PROBLEMS Pronoun Problems – Pronouns in Compounds • Use the subject pronoun I, she, he, we, and they in a compound subject with a predicate noun or pronoun. Kathy and he decided to research a mystery. The research team was Jim and I. Pronoun Problems – Problems in Compounds • Use the object pronouns me, her, him, us, and them in a compound object. Samantha asked Jim and me about the movie. Kathy loaned our report to Mac and her. Intervening Phrases • Sometimes words and phrases come between a subject and a pronoun that refers to it. Don’t be confused by those words in between, Mentally cross out the phrase to figure out agreement. Jim, like the others, brought his map. (His agrees with Jim, not with others.) Five planes from a Navy airfield lost their way in the Bermuda triangle. (Their agrees with planes, not with airfield.)