English Grammar : Pronouns


Personal pronouns

Reflexive (intensive) pronouns




Rob doesn't like Luke or me.
NOT Rob doesn't like Luke or myself.

Demonstrative pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns ( this, that, these, those) point out what you are talking about. 

When they stand alone in place of nouns, these words are pronouns. But when they precede nouns, they are adjectives: this car, that word, these shoes

Relative pronouns

Relative pronouns ( who, whom, which, that) introduce clauses that describe nouns or pronouns. 

The trend is toward using that and whichinterchangeably, although many teachers and editors prefer to maintain a distinction. Use thatwhen the clause that follows it is restrictive:when it provides information necessary to define your subject. Use which when the clause that follows it is nonrestrictive: when it adds information that isn't necessary to define your subject. 

NOT The car which hit her was green. 
The relative clause that hit her restricts or limits the subject, car. The information in the clause is necessary to the main statement. 

The clause which I bought a week ago adds information about the subject that isn't necessary to our understanding of the main statement that the car gets good mileage. 
Use commas around a which clause but not with a that clause. 

Interrogative pronouns

Interrogative pronouns ( who, whom, whose, which, what) introduce questions. 

What is your destination?
Who asked the question?

Indefinite pronouns

Indefinite pronouns don't specify the persons or things they refer to. The most frequently used indefinite pronouns are all, any, anybody, anyone, both, each, either, everybody, everyone, few, many, neither, nobody, none, no one, one, several, some, somebody, and someone. Like other pronouns, indefinite pronouns stand in for nouns, even if those nouns aren't specified. 

PK

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