Irvingwash (talk | contribs) |
Irvingwash (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 132: | Line 132: | ||
<br>There are some indefinite pronouns are always singular, and others that are always plural, and some that can be both depending on the surrounding text or context. Here is a list: | <br>There are some indefinite pronouns are always singular, and others that are always plural, and some that can be both depending on the surrounding text or context. Here is a list: | ||
− | + | {|class="wikitable" | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | | '''Singular Indefinite Pronouns''' | |
− | + | | '''Plural Indefinite Pronouns''' | |
− | + | | '''Indefinite Pronouns Which Work as Singular or Plural''' | |
+ | |- | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |Another Both All | ||
+ | |Anybody Few Any | ||
+ | |Anyone Fewer More | ||
<br>Anything Many Most | <br>Anything Many Most | ||
<br>Each Others None | <br>Each Others None |
Revision as of 05:29, 4 April 2020
PERSONAL AND REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS
Subject | Object | Possessive Adjective | Possessive Pronoun | Reflexive | |
Singular | |||||
I | me | my | mine | myself | |
you | you | your | yours | yourself | |
he | him | his | his | himself | |
she | her | her | hers | herself | |
it | it | its | its | itself | |
Plural | |||||
we | us | our | ours | ourselves | |
you | you | your | yours | yourself | |
they | them | their | theirs | themselves |
1. Personal Pronouns
(a) SUBJECT PRONOUNS occupy the subject position of a sentence: He is a North American; You are at the beginning of this course; She is from southern Europe.
(b) OBJECT PRONOUNS are used as the object of a verb: I know him very well; I see her every day: or as the object of a preposition: I live with them; I spoke to her.
(c) POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES are used to modify (describe) a noun: This is my book; Is she your child? That is our problem
(d) POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS do not appear before nouns: This is mine; This book is yours. They often appear as subjects: Mine is the best.
2. Demonstrative Pronouns
Like personal subject pronouns (I, you, she, etc.), the DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS, this, that, these, and those, occupy the subject position of a sentence: This is a picture of my father; That is the formula for success.
a. This refers to a person or thing close to the speaker; This (woman) is an old friend of mine; This (here in my hand) is a rare butterfly.
b. That refers to a person or thing at some distance from the speaker: That is a picture of my mother on the wall; That (a bird up in a tree) is a nightingale.
c. These (the plural of this) refers to persons or things close to the speaker: These are important examples: These are the best years of our lives.
d. Those (the plural of that) refers to persons or things at some distance from the speaker: Those (books up on the top shelf) are very old; Those (apples up in the tree) are ready to pick.
3. Interrogative Pronouns
The main interrogative pronouns are "what," "which," "who," "whom," and "whose." Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions.
The other, less common interrogative pronouns are the same as the ones above but with the suffix "-ever" or "-soever" (e.g., "whatever," "whichever," "whatsoever," "whichsoever").
Easy Examples of Interrogative Pronouns
Who did it?
What is that?
Which is his?
Whom shall we invite to the celebration?
Whose are those?
Whatever did you do?
Whomsoever did you pick?
Whosever is this?
4. Indefinite Pronouns
An indefinite pronoun is a pronoun that refers to a person or a thing without being specific.
Like all pronouns, an indefinite pronoun is a substitute for a noun or a noun phrase.
There are some indefinite pronouns are always singular, and others that are always plural, and some that can be both depending on the surrounding text or context. Here is a list:
Singular Indefinite Pronouns | Plural Indefinite Pronouns | Indefinite Pronouns Which Work as Singular or Plural | |
Another Both All | Anybody Few Any | Anyone Fewer More
Simple way to remember: if your "none" best translates as "not one of," go singular. However, if it best translates "not any of," go plural. That's the usual advice given, but it's not great because "not any of" sounds awkward, which steers writers away from going plural with "none." Here's some more-useful advice. Follow your instincts, but, if you're still unsure, go singular.
|