Download PRONOUNS

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Chinese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Tagalog grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup

Relative clause wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

American Sign Language grammar wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Zulu grammar wikipedia , lookup

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Sloppy identity wikipedia , lookup

Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Vietnamese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Arabic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Sanskrit grammar wikipedia , lookup

Contraction (grammar) wikipedia , lookup

Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup

Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Literary Welsh morphology wikipedia , lookup

Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Sotho parts of speech wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Bound variable pronoun wikipedia , lookup

Third-person pronoun wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Name__________________
PRONOUNS
Subject Pronouns: The subject of a sentence.
I, he, she, we, they, you, it
Object Pronouns: Object pronouns follow an action verb or a
preposition.
Me, him, her, us, them, you, it
Possessive Pronouns: Possessive pronouns show ownership.
My, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, our, ours, their, theirs, its
Demonstrative Pronouns: A demonstrative pronoun points out or
identifies a noun without naming it.
This, that, these, those
*** Do not put a noun after demonstrative pronouns or the
pronoun becomes an adjective. For example, in the sentence,
This book is damaged, this is an adjective modifying book.
In the sentence, This is damaged, this acts as a demonstrative
pronoun.
Interrogative Pronouns: We use interrogative pronouns to
interrogate or ask a question.
Who, whose, whom, which, what
Indefinite Pronouns: An indefinite pronoun refers to people or
things that are not named or known.
all, another, any, anybody, anyone, anything, both, each, each one,
either, everybody, everyone, everything, few, many, most, much,
neither, nobody, none, no one, nothing, one, other, several, some,
somebody, someone, something, such
Antecedents: An antecedent is the noun that a pronoun refers
to or replaces. All pronouns have antecedents.
Andrew’s brother has his own skateboard. Brother is the
antecedent of the pronoun his.
Articles: A, An and The