Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
replace nouns
Pronouns
come in many
different
varieties.
N A L
R S O S
PE O U N
O N
PR
Personal nominative pronouns (also
known as subject pronouns)--used as
the subject of the sentence or the
predicate pronoun
singular plural
1st person I we
2nd person you you
3rd person he, she, it they
singular plural
1st person me us
2nd person you you
3rd person him, her, it them
Possessive pronouns—used to
show ownership or relationship
singular plural
1st person my, mine our, ours
2nd person your, yours your, yours
3rd person his, her, their, theirs
hers, its
REFLEXIVE / INTENSIVE
intensive
Rover tried
everything
he could
think of
to reflexive
free
himself.
demonstrative pronouns—point out a
particular person, place, thing, or idea
Example: This is my dog Penny.
both
few
many
several
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS
SINGULAR OR PLURAL
all
any
most
none
All the king’s horses . . .
RELATIVE PRONOUNS
A relative pronoun
introduces a subordinate
(dependent) clause.