Transcript Pronouns
PRONOUNS
Take the place of nouns
STUDY THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES:
When Sue Jones met Ted Smith, Sue Jones noticed
that Ted Smith was carrying several books. Sue
Jones offered to help Ted Smith. Ted Smith thanked
Sue Jones.
When Sue Jones met Ted Smith, she noticed that he
was carrying several books. She offered to help him.
Ted Smith thanked her.
The first sentences repeats the same nouns over and
over again. The second sentence uses pronouns to
take the place of the nouns making the sentence
shorter, less confusing, and repetitive.
DEFINITION:
A pronoun is a word that is used in place of a noun or
another pronoun. A pronoun can refer to a person,
place, thing, or idea.
Ramon visited Death Valley, and he was impressed.
Death Valley is mysterious. It is silent.
PRONOUNS…
Name specific people or things
Point to non-specific people or things
EX: Everyone enjoyed the party, but nobody
remembered to thank the hostess.
Point to something
EX: You look like him.
EX: This is the dress I want.
Refer back to the subject
EX: Bruce hurt himself.
PRONOUN AGREEMENT
The antecedent is the noun that the pronoun
takes the place of or stands for. All pronouns
must agree with their antecedents in number and
gender.
EX: Tucker gave his sister a new doll.
Antecedent
EX: Death Valley is mysterious. It is silent.
Antecedent
Pronoun
Pronoun
The pronoun almost always refers to the noun
closest to it.
EXAMPLES OF PRONOUNS…
I, me, my, mine
You, your, yours
He, him, his
She, her, hers
We, us, our, ours
They, them,
their, theirs
anybody
who
each
whom
either
what
someone
whose
something
one (not a number)
both (not a number)
this
that
these
there
here
myself
yourself
herself
themselves
ourselves
PERSONAL PRONOUNS:
Personal Pronouns refer to particular people,
places, things, or ideas. Pronouns such as we, I, he,
them, and it are called personal pronouns.
Personal Pronouns indicate different persons,
numbers, and cases.
Singular
Plural
First Person (the speaker)
I, me
we, us
Second Person (person spoken to)
you
you
Third Person (person spoken about)
he, him, she, her
they, them
Impersonal Pronoun
it
It refers to nobody. It is used everywhere to refer to any place or thing. It is used as
both subject and object.
EX: It was mine. (subject)
I paid money for it. (object)
SUBJECT PRONOUNS:
A subject pronoun is used as a subject in a
sentence or as a predicate pronoun after a linking
verb
EX: I, you, he, she, it, we, they
Pronouns as subjects…
Use a subject pronoun when the pronoun is a
subject or part of the compound subject.
The Hope diamond has a fascinating history.
It has been bad luck for many owners.
(It, referring to The Hope Diamond, is the subject of
the sentence.)
OBJECT PRONOUNS:
Object pronoun is used as a direct object, an indirect
object, an object of a preposition.
Direct Object: the pronoun receives the action of a
verb and answers the question whom or what
EX: The mysterious death of King Tut fascinates me.
Indirect Object: the pronoun tells to whom or what or
for whom or what an action is performed.
EX: me, you, him, her, it us, them
EX: Chloe lent me a video on the topic.
Object of a Preposition: the pronoun follows a
preposition (such as to, from, for, against, by, or about).
EX: I can tell the story to you and him.
Preposition
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS:
A possessive pronoun is a personal pronoun used
to show ownership or relationship.
Singular: my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, Its
(notice NO apostrophe)
Plural: our, ours, your, yours, their, theirs
No one saw the mummies in their colorful clothes.
(ownership)
Then Professor Mare and his tour group arrived.
(relationship)
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS AND
CONTRACTIONS:
Some possessive pronouns sound like contractions
(its/it’s; your/you’re; their/they’re). Because these
pairs sound alike, writers often confuse possessive
pronouns with contractions.
Remember, a possessive pronoun NEVER has an
apostrophe.
A contraction, however, ALWAYS has an
apostrophe. The apostrophe shows where a letter
or letters have been left out after combining words.
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS:
Indefinite pronouns do not replace a particular
noun; the antecedent is often not known.
EX: anybody, each, either, none, someone, one
Everyone heard the noise.