English

Practical English Grammar


the pronoun


The pronoun, the second of the eight parts of speech, is a word that takes
the place of a noun.

➲In the sentence, ‘‘Felipe is an intelligent student,’’ the noun, Felipe, can
be replaced by the singular pronoun he. Thus, the new sentence reads,
‘‘He is an intelligent student.’’
➲In the sentence, ‘‘We offered the baseball tickets to Rita and Drew,’’
the nouns, Rita and Drew, can be replaced by the plural pronoun,
them. The new sentence will now read, ‘‘We offered the baseball tickets
to them.’’

There are several types of pronouns.
Personal pronouns refer to people, places, things, and ideas. I, me, you,
your, they, us, and it are all personal pronouns.

Reflexive pronouns are formed by adding ‘‘-self’’ or ‘‘-selves’’ to cer-
tain personal pronouns. They ‘‘reflect’’ back to the person or thing
mentioned in the sentence. Myself, himself, herself, itself, yourself, your-
selves, and themselves are reflexive pronouns. There is no such word as
theirselves.

Demonstrative pronouns can be singular or plural. They point out a
specific person, place, or thing. This, that, these, and those are demonstrative
pronouns.

Interrogative pronouns, like their name suggests, are used when asking
a question. Who, whom, which, and whose are interrogative pronouns.
Indefinite pronouns do not refer to a specific person, place, or thing.
Some indefinite pronouns are another, both, everyone, most, no one, and
several.

--- >>>

Notes


Practical English Grammar - Notes
1. compound subjects part two
Show Notes
2. Quotation Marks Part Three
Show Notes
3. Italics Hyphens and Brackets
Show Notes
4. complete and simple subjects
Show Notes
5. Sound a like words Part Four
Show Notes
6. the adjective clause
Show Notes
7. Commas Part Two
Show Notes
8. what good writers do
Show Notes
9. the indirect object
Show Notes
10. Commas Part Four
Show Notes
11. Periods Question Marks and Exclamation Marks
Show Notes
12. subject and verb agreement
Show Notes
13. the object of the preposition
Show Notes
14. Confusing usage words part one
Show Notes
15. Confusing usage words part five
Show Notes
16. The Apostrophe
Show Notes
17. The coordinating conjunction
Show Notes
18. Confusing usage words part three
Show Notes
19. Quotation Marks Part One
Show Notes
20. Quotation Marks Part Two
Show Notes
21. compound subjects part one
Show Notes
22. Confusing usage words part three
Show Notes
23. First Capitalization List
Show Notes
24. pronouns and their antecedents
Show Notes
25. the prepositional phrase
Show Notes
26. Transitive and intransitive verbs
Show Notes
27. complex sentences
Show Notes
28. agreement involving prepositional phrases
Show Notes
29. introducing phrases
Show Notes
30. the verb phrase
Show Notes
31. the participle and participial phrase
Show Notes
32. Confusing usage words part eight
Show Notes
33. Regular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
Show Notes
34. Parentheses Ellipsis Marks and Dashes
Show Notes
35. The verb be
Show Notes
36. subject verb agreement situations
Show Notes
37. regular verb tenses
Show Notes
38. types of sentences by purpose
Show Notes
39. the correlative conjunction
Show Notes
40. the subordinating conjunction
Show Notes
41. compound subject and compound predicate
Show Notes
42. subject complements predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives
Show Notes
43. types of nouns
Show Notes
44. personal pronouns
Show Notes
45. the noun adjective pronoun question
Show Notes
46. the infinitive and infinitive phrase
Show Notes
47. Irregular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
Show Notes
48. Commas Part One
Show Notes
49. Commas Part Five
Show Notes
50. agreement between indefinite pronouns and their antecedents
Show Notes