reflexive and intensive pronouns
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Transcript reflexive and intensive pronouns
Ch. 19: Using
Pronouns Correctly
604-627
Case
Case is the FORM that a noun or
pronoun takes to show its relationship to
other words in a sentence.
English has three cases:
Nominative (subject)
OBJECTIVE
Possessive
Noun cases
Noun forms are the same for nominative and
objective cases.
NOM: The cannibal bit my arm off.
OBJ: I shot the cannibal.
Nouns change form in the possessive case by
adding an apostrophe.
POSS: I toilet papered the cannibal’s house
again.
Pronoun cases
Pronouns change forms more often.
NOM: We slept in Mr. Flint’s class.
She and Irving slept past the bell
OBJ: Mr. Flint tried to wake US up.
He kicked Irving and HER.
POSS: Mr. Flint collected OUR work.
He put HER work in the trash.
Case forms tell you:
Number – singular or plural
Person – 1st, 2nd or 3rd
Gender – Masculine, feminine or neuter
The Nominative Case
(subjects & predicate
nominatives)
1st
2nd
3rd
1st
2nd
3rd
SINGULAR
I
you
he, she, it
PLURAL
we
you
they
Subjects & Predicate
Nominatives…
are always in the NOMINATIVE form.
HE AND I will cut your car in half.
Mr. Flint said that I should leave.
The one with the highest grade is SHE.
It was I who made the comment.
608: Exercise 1
The Objective Case (DO, IO,
& objects of prepositions)
1st
2nd
3rd
1st
2nd
3rd
SINGULAR
ME
you
him, her, it
PLURAL
us
you
THEM
Direct objects, Indirect
objects and Objects of
prepositions…
are always in the OBJECTIVE form.
My English teacher robbed ME.
He talks about giving THEM my money.
Let’s pull a prank on Irving and HER.
Did you go with Irving and HIM to see the
Justin Beiber movie?
611: Exercise 2
611: Exercise 3
612: Review A
The Possessive Case
1st
2nd
3rd
1st
2nd
3rd
SINGULAR
my, MINE
your, yours
his, her, HERS, its
PLURAL
our, ours
your, yours
THEIR, theirs
Some are used as
pronouns
Pronouns REPLACE nouns or other
pronouns.
Mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs
Your car and MINE were stolen again.
We stole HIS yesterday.
Compared to YOURS, my dog smells
good.
Some are used as
adjectives
Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns.
(These are still pronouns – they replace
people’s names – but they are also used to
modify a noun/pronoun in the sentence)
MY car is gone!
HIS first attempt at robbery failed.
Do you remember OUR secret handshake?
Gerunds
A noun or pronoun that precedes a
gerund should be in the possessive case.
Remember: a gerund is:
Verb form
Ends in –ing
Functions as a noun (it’s a thing)
You can replace it with IT
Gerund examples
THEIR winning led to a celebration.
Winning is a thing; it is the subject.
IT led to a celebration.
My parents objected to MY working late.
They didn’t object to ME.
They objected to IT – working.
We were thrilled by Irving’s scoring in
the top 10.
Present participles
Don’t confuse gerunds with present
participles.
Present participles
Are verb forms
End in –ing
But do not function as nouns (they aren’t
things)
They can’t be replaced by IT
Present participle
examples
We found him sitting on a bench.
We found HIM. We didn’t find SITTING.
‘Sitting’ is not a thing. ‘Sitting’ describes a
thing: ‘him.’
He didn’t see the dodge ball until he felt it
colliding with his face.
He didn’t feel ‘colliding.’ He felt IT.
‘Colliding’ is not a thing. ‘Colliding’
describes the ball.
614: Exercise 4
Appositives
An appositive is a noun or pronoun placed
beside another noun or pronoun to IDENTIFY
or describe it.
An easy way to remember this: appositives
ADD information (positive +)
A pronoun used as an appositive is in the
same CASE as the word it identifies
Appositive examples
My best friends, Irving and HE, robbed me
yesterday.
“Irving and he” identifies my best friends, the
subjects. So HE is in the nominative (SUBJECT)
case.
My dad paid the two guys, Irving and HIM, to
get my stuff back.
“Irving and him” identifies the two guys, the direct
objects. So HIM is in the objective case.
We/Us with appositives
When these have appositives, try each
form without the appositive to see which
case to use.
(We, Us) students learned many
interesting things.
The counselor talked to (we, us)
students.
615: Exercise 5
Pronouns in elliptical
constructions
An elliptical construction is a word group
from which words are MISSING.
We use these when making
comparisons.
These usually begin with THAN or AS.
I can read as fast as you (can).
See how CAN is missing? That’s what
makes this an elliptical construction.
Elliptical constructions
A pronoun in an elliptical construction is the
same CASE as it would be if the construction
were completed.
Most of us would say:
I run as fast as him.
But complete the construction by adding the
VERB from the beginning of the comparison:
I run as fast as him runs ???
Correct: I run as fast as he runs.
I run as fast as HE.
More ellipticals
Irving is a better robber than ______
He IS a better robber than I AM.
Even my dog is smarter than ____
My dog is smarter than HE IS.
Irving has as much money as ____
He has as much money as WE HAVE.
Different cases, different
meanings
Dan misses New York as much as her.
Verb = misses. Put that after “as.”
Dan misses NY as much as (he) misses her.
Dan misses New York as much as she.
Verb = misses.
Dan misses NY as much as she misses (it).
Or “as much as she does.”
Another example
Did Mr. Flint pay you as much as I?
Verb = pay.
Did he pay you as much as I paid (you)?
Did Mr. Flint pay you as much as me?
Verb = pay.
Did he pay you as much as (he) paid me?
616: Exercise 6
Reflexive and Intensive
Pronouns
1st
2nd
3rd
1st
2nd
3rd
SINGULAR
myself
yourself
himself, HERSELF, itself
PLURAL
ourselves
yourselves
THEMSELVES
Reflexive Pronouns
Review
Reflexives refer to the subject of a verb
and function as a complement (DO, IO,
OC, PN, PA) or an object of a
preposition.
Bill is not himself today. (PN)
I hurt myself. (DO)
Give yourself a pat on the back. (IO)
She would rather be by herself. (OP)
Intensive Pronouns
Review
An intensive pronoun emphasizes its
antecedent and has no grammatical
function in the sentence.
My dad and I restored the car ourselves.
We didn’t restore ourselves.
Rather than forcing an underling to do it, I
myself did the dirty work.
-self & -selves pronouns
must refer to something in
the sentence
Irving and myself robbed another bank.
Myself doesn’t refer to anything in the
sentence.
Correct: Irving and I robbed another bank.
“How are you?”
“OK. How about yourself?”
Yourself doesn’t refer to anything.
Correct: “How about you?”
Give these to Mr. Flint or (myself/me).
618: Exercise 7
Who and Whom
These are different cases.
Nominative:
Objective:
Possessive:
WHO
whom
whose
whoever
whomever
WHOSEVER
So “who” is for subjects and PNs
“Whom” is for DO, IO, OP
Mr. Bulgrien’s method
Nominative (subject) forms:
Singular: HE
WHO
Plural: they
who
Notice how they sound familiar.
(whoever)
(whoever)
Objective forms:
Singular: HIM
WHOM
(whomever)
Plural: THEM whom
(whomever)
They sound familiar and have Ms.
Possessive forms:
Singular: HIS
WHOSE
(whosever)
Plural: Their whose
(whosever)
They sound familiar and have Ss.
How it works
When you have or need Who/Whom in a
sentence:
1. Find the verb after it.
2. Put the subject of that verb first.
3. Try plugging in HE or HIM where you
need who or whom.
4. If HE works, use WHO. If him works,
use whom.
Who/Whom examples
Who did you get to take care of your cats?
Verb = did get.Subject of that: YOU.
Put subject first and plug in he/him.
You did get (him) to take care of your cats?
So it should be “WHOM did you get…”
Whom gave us that stolen money?
V = gave.
Subject = … not sure?
Plug in he/him HE gave us that stolen money?
So it should be “WHO gave us…”
Try these
_____ did the expert recommend?
_____ took my Doritos?
You were arrested by ____?
The prize will go to ____-ever robs the most
banks.
Yes, I am the one ____ cut your car in half.
____ do you think will win the Super Bowl?
Irving is ____ I think will be valedictorian.
621: Exercise 8
621: Review B
623: Review C
623 Review D