Pronouns

PRONOUN - (Replaces a Noun)


A pronoun is used in place of a noun or noun phrase to avoid repetition.
Examples of pronouns: I, you, we, they, he, she, it, me, us, them, him, her, this, those
Example sentences: Mary is tired. She wants to sleep. I want her to dance with me.

Pronouns are a major subclass of nouns. We call them a subclass of nouns because they can sometimes replace a noun in a sentence:   
 
Noun
Pronoun
John got a new job~He got a new job
Children should watch less television~They should watch less television 
   
In these examples the pronouns have the same reference as the nouns which they replace. In each case, they refer to people, and so we call them PERSONAL PRONOUNS. However, we also include in this group the pronoun it, although this pronoun does not usually refer to a person. There are three personal pronouns, and each has a singular and a plural form:   
 
PersonSingularPlural
1stIwe
2ndyouyou
3rdhe/she/itthey
   
These pronouns also have another set of forms, which we show here:   
 
Person
Singular
Plural
1stmeus
2ndyouyou
3rdhim/her/itthem
   
The first set of forms (I, you, he...) exemplifies the SUBJECTIVE CASE, and the second set (me, you, him...) exemplifies the OBJECTIVE CASE. The distinction between the two cases relates to how they can be used in sentences. For instance, in our first example above, we say that he can replace John   
 
John got a new job~He got a new job
   
But he cannot replace John in I gave John a new job. Here, we have to use the objective form himI gave him a new job.   
    


Other Types of Pronoun 

As well as personal pronouns, there are many other types, which we summarise here.   
 
Pronoun TypeMembers of the SubclassExample
Possessivemine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirsThe white car is mine
Reflexivemyself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, oneself, ourselves, yourselves, themselvesHe injured himself playing football
Reciprocaleach other, one anotherThey really hate each other
Relativethat, which, who, whose, whom, where, whenThe book that you gave me was really boring
Demonstrativethis, that, these, thoseThis is a new car
Interrogativewho, what, why, where, when, whateverWhat did he say to you?
Indefiniteanything, anybody, anyone, something, somebody, someone, nothing, nobody, none, no oneThere's something in my shoe
   
Case and number distinctions do not apply to all pronoun types. In fact, they apply only to personal pronouns, possessive pronouns, and reflexive pronouns. It is only in these types, too, that gender differences are shown (personal he/she, possessive his/hers, reflexive himself/herself). All other types are unvarying in their form.   
Many of the pronouns listed above also belong to another word class - the class of determiners. They are pronouns when they occur independently, that is, without a noun following them, as in This is a new car. But when a noun follows them - This car is new - they are determiners. We will look at determiners in the next section.   
A major difference between pronouns and nouns generally is that pronouns do not take the or a/an before them. Further, pronouns do not take adjectives before them, except in very restricted constructions involving some indefinite pronouns (a little somethinga certain someone).   
While the class of nouns as a whole is an open class, the subclass of pronouns is closed.  

  

Until next lesson!



-Chris!

1 comment:

  1. Sentences
    He is a doctor.
    He studied because his sister has a disease.
    Their parents died when they were young.
    He looks after some puppies. This puppies are hers.
    She cannot look after them herself.

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