1 / 13

Pronouns

Pronouns. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun. . Personal Pronouns. Refer to specific people and things. In order to use personal pronouns you need to know: Case- Subject, object and possessive Number- Singular or plural Person- First, second, or third. Subject Pronouns .

nam
Télécharger la présentation

Pronouns

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun.

  2. Personal Pronouns • Refer to specific people and things. In order to use personal pronouns you need to know: • Case- Subject, object and possessive • Number- Singular or plural • Person- First, second, or third

  3. Subject Pronouns • I, you, he, she, it, we, they • Subject pronouns are used as a subject or a predicate noun • I am the lion tamer, and you are just the lion. • It was she who did that.

  4. Object Pronouns • Me, you, him, her, it, us, them • Object pronouns are used as indirect objects, direct objects or object of a preposition • Dad told me to give him the cake. • The boys are going with us and them. • The teacher saw you do it.

  5. Possessive Pronouns • Take the place of possessive nouns • Her sandwich is much thinker than his. • Lola’s sandwich is much thicker than Larry’s.

  6. Uses of Personal Pronouns • Subject of a sentence • He ran for the school bus. • Predicate pronouns • The leader of the trop is he. • Direct object of a verb • I saw her at the mall. • Indirect object of a verb • Try to sell them a glass of lemonade. • Object of a preposition • The truckload of feathers fell on them. • Appositive • The new students, Tim and she, were asked to stand. • To show possession (ownership) • This is their science project.

  7. Number of a pronoun • Shows whether the pronoun refers to a single person or thing or more than one person or thing • Number is important because it tells you what verb to use • Singular pronouns are • I, me, my, mine, he, she, him, her, his, hers, it, or, its • Plural pronouns • We, us, our, ours, they, them, their, theirs • You and yours are both!

  8. First, Second, and Third Person Pronoun • First person • I, we • Me, us • My, mine, our, ours • Second Person • You, your, yours • Third Person • He, she, it • His, her, hers, its • Him, her, it • They, them, their, theirs

  9. Five other kinds of pronouns • Demonstrative pronouns point out specific persons, animals, places, things, and ideas • Indefinite pronouns refer to nouns in a general, indefinite sort of way • Intensive pronouns emphasize a noun or another pronoun • Reflexive pronounsthey don’t intensify but refer back to the subject of the sentence • Interrogative pronouns ask questions

  10. Demonstrative Pronouns • This • That • These • Those

  11. Indefinite Pronouns • All • Another • Any • Anybody • Anyone • Anything • Both • Each • Either • Everybody • Everyone • Everything • Few • Many • Neither • Nobody • No one • Nothing • One • Others • Several • Some • Somebody • Someone • Something

  12. Intensive Pronouns • Singular • Myself • Yourself • Himself • Herself • itself • Plural • Ourselves • Yourselves • Themselves

  13. Interrogative • What, which, who, whom, whose

More Related