Pronouns
Pronouns
replace nouns. A different pronoun is required depending on two elements: the
noun being replaced and the function that noun has in the sentence. In English,
pronouns only take the gender of the noun they replace in the 3rd person
singular form. The 2nd person plural pronouns are identical to the 2nd person
singular pronouns except for the reflexive pronoun.
Subject Pronoun
|
Object Pronoun
|
Possessive Adjective (Determiner)
|
Possessive Pronoun
|
Reflexive or Intensive Pronoun
|
|
1st
person singular
|
I
|
me
|
my
|
mine
|
myself
|
2nd
person singular
|
you
|
you
|
your
|
yours
|
yourself
|
3rd
person singular, male
|
he
|
him
|
his
|
his
|
himself
|
3rd
person singular, female
|
she
|
her
|
her
|
hers
|
herself
|
3rd
person singular, neutral
|
it
|
it
|
its
|
itself
|
|
1st
person plural
|
we
|
us
|
our
|
ours
|
ourselves
|
2nd
person plural
|
you
|
you
|
your
|
yours
|
yourselves
|
3rd
person plural
|
they
|
them
|
their
|
theirs
|
themselves
|
Subject Pronouns
Subject
pronouns replace nouns that are the subject of their clause. In the 3rd person,
subject pronouns are often used to avoid repetition of the subject's name.
Examples
- I am 16.
- You seem lost.
- Jim is angry, and he wants Sally to apologize.
- This table is old. It needs to be repainted.
- We aren't coming.
- They don't like pancakes.
Object Pronouns
Object
pronouns are used to replace nouns that are the direct or indirect object of a
clause.
Examples
- Give the book to me.
- The teacher wants to talk to you.
- Jake is hurt because Bill hit him.
- Rachid recieved a letter from her last week.
- Mark can't find it.
- Don't be angry with us.
- Tell them to hurry up!
Possessive Adjectives (Determiners)
Possessive
adjectives are not pronouns, but rather determiners. It is useful to learn them
at the same time as pronouns, however, because they are similar in form to the
possessive pronouns. Possessive adjectives function as adjectives, so they
appear before the noun they modify. They do not replace a noun as pronouns do.
Examples
- Did mother find my shoes?
- Mrs. Baker wants to see your homework.
- Can Jake bring over his baseball cards?
- Samantha will fix her bike tomorrow.
- The cat broke its leg.
- This is our house.
- Where is their school?
Possessive Pronouns
Possessive
pronouns replace possessive nouns as either the subject or the object of a
clause. Because the noun being replaced doesn't appear in the sentence, it must
be clear from the context.
Examples
- This bag is mine.
- Yours is not blue.
- That bag looks like his.
- These shoes are not hers.
- That car is ours.
- Theirs is parked in the garage.
Reflexive & Intensive Pronouns
Reflexive
and intensive pronouns are the same set of words but they have different
functions in a sentence.
Reflexive
pronouns refer back to the subject of the clause because the subject of the
action is also the direct or indirect object. Only certain types of verbs can
be reflexive. You cannot remove a reflexive pronoun from a sentence because the
remaining sentence would be grammatically incorrect.
Examples
- I told myself to calm down.
- You cut yourself on this nail?
- He hurt himself on the stairs.
- She found herself in a dangerous part of town.
- The cat threw itself under my car!
- We blame ourselves for the fire.
- The children can take care of themselves.
Intensive
pronouns emphasize the subject of a clause. They are not the object of the
action. The intensive pronoun can always be removed from a sentence without
changing the meaning significantly, although the emphasis on the subject will
be removed. Intensive pronouns can be placed immediately after the subject of the
clause, or at the end of the clause.
Examples
- I made these cookies myself.
- You yourself asked Jake to come.
- The Pope himself pardoned Mr. Brown.
- My teacher didn't know the answer herself.
- The test itself wasn't scary, but my teacher certainly is.
- We would like to finish the renovation before Christmas ourselves.
- They themselves told me the lost shoe wasn't a problem.
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