What is a Pronoun?
A pronoun can replace a noun or another pronoun. You use pronouns like
"he," "which," "none," and "you" to
make your sentences less cumbersome and less repetitive.
Subjective Personal Pronouns
A subjective personal pronoun
indicates that the pronoun is acting as the subject of the sentence. The subjective personal
pronouns are "I," "you," "she," "he,"
"it," "we," "you," "they."
In the
following sentences, each of the highlighted words is a subjective
personal pronoun and acts as the subject of the sentence:
I was glad to find the bus pass in the bottom of the
green knapsack.
You are surely the strangest child I
have ever met.
He stole the selkie's skin and forced her to live with
him.
When she was a young woman, she
earned her living as a coal miner.
After many years, they
returned to their homeland.
We will meet at the library at 3:30 p.m.
It is on the counter.
Are you the delegates from Arabic?
Objective Personal Pronouns
An objective personal pronoun
indicates that the pronoun is acting as an object of a verb, compound verb, preposition, or infinitive phrase. The objective personal
pronouns are: "me," "you," "her,"
"him," "it," "us," "you," and
"them."
In the
following sentences, each of the highlighted words is an objective
personal pronoun:
Seamus stole the selkie's skin and
forced her to live with him.
The
objective personal pronoun "her" is the direct object of the verb "forced" and
the objective personal pronoun "him" is the object of the preposition
"with."
After reading the pamphlet, Judy
threw it into the garbage can.
The pronoun
"it" is the direct object of the verb "threw."
The agitated assistant stood up and
faced the angry delegates and said, "Our leader will address you in
five minutes."
In this
sentence, the pronoun "you" is the direct object of the verb
"address."
Deborah and Roberta will meet us
at the newest café in the market.
Here the
objective personal pronoun "us" is the direct object of the compound
verb "will meet."
Give the list to me.
Here the
objective personal pronoun "me" is the object of the preposition
"to."
I'm not sure that my contact will
talk to you.
Similarly in
this example, the objective personal pronoun "you" is the object of
the preposition "to."
Christopher was surprised to see her
at the drag races.
Here the
objective personal pronoun "her" is the object of the infinitive
phrase "to see."
Possessive Personal Pronouns
A possessive pronoun indicates that the
pronoun is acting as a marker of possession and defines who owns a particular
object or person. The possessive
personal pronouns are "mine," "yours,"
"hers," "his," "its," "ours," and
"theirs." Note that possessive personal pronouns are very similar to possessive adjectives like "my,"
"her," and "their."
In each of
the following sentences, the highlighted word is a possessive personal
pronoun:
The smallest gift is mine.
Here the
possessive pronoun "mine" functions as a subject complement.
This is yours.
Here too the
possessive pronoun "yours" functions as a subject complement.
His is on the kitchen counter.
In this
example, the possessive pronoun "his" acts as the subject of the
sentence.
Theirs will be delivered tomorrow.
In this
sentence, the possessive pronoun "theirs" is the subject of the
sentence.
Ours is the green one on the corner.
Here too the
possessive pronoun "ours" function as the subject of the sentence.
Demonstrative Pronouns
A demonstrative pronoun points to and
identifies a noun or a pronoun. "This" and "these" refer to
things that are nearby either in space or in time, while "that" and
"those" refer to things that are farther away in space or time.
The
demonstrative pronouns are "this," "that,"
"these," and "those." "This" and "that"
are used to refer to singular nouns or noun phrases and "these" and
"those" are used to refer to plural nouns and noun phrases. Note that the
demonstrative pronouns are identical to demonstrative adjectives, though, obviously, you
use them differently. It is also important to note that "that" can
also be used as a relative pronoun.
In the
following sentences, each of the highlighted words is a demonstrative
pronoun:
This must not continue.
Here
"this" is used as the subject of the compound verb "must not
continue."
This is puny; that is the tree I
want.
In this
example "this" is used as subject and refers to something close to
the speaker. The demonstrative pronoun "that" is also a subject but
refers to something farther away from the speaker.
Three customers wanted these.
Here
"these" is the direct object of the verb "wanted."
No comments:
Post a Comment