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Pronouns. Grade Seven. Definition. A pronoun takes the place of a noun.That means it can replace a person, place, thing, or idea.Ex. Mark could be replaced by
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1. Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show. Press the enter key to view each part of the review.
3. Definition A pronoun takes the place of a noun.
That means it can replace a person, place, thing, or idea.
Ex. Mark could be replaced by “he” or “him.”
4. Definition An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces.
Ex. Mark gave his lunch money to Joe.
(The pronoun is “his.” “His” is replacing Mark; therefore, “Mark” is the antecedent.)
5. Definition First person means the person being spoken to.
Ex. I am Bob. “I” is speaking in the sentence; therefore, “I” is a first person pronoun.
Other first person pronouns are: we, me, us, my, mine, our, ours, myself, ourselves
6. Definition Second person means the person being spoken to.
Ex. I saw you at the party. The person, “you” is being spoken to; therefore, “you” is a second person pronoun.
Other second person pronouns are: your, yours, yourself, yourselves
7. Definition Third person pronouns are being spoken about.
Ex. He gave Mary a book. (“He” is being talked about; therefore, “he” is a third person pronoun.)
Other third person pronouns are: she, it, they, her, him, them, his, hers, its, their, theirs, himself, herself, itself, themselves.
8. Qualities of Pronouns Person
(first person, second person, third person)
Number
(singular, plural)
9.
Cases
of
Pronouns
10. Nominative Pronouns
11. Objective Pronouns
12. Possessive Pronouns
13. Compound Personal Pronouns
14. Types of Pronouns
15. Personal Pronouns Personal pronouns are found in the Nominative, Objective, Possessive, and Compound Personal charts
16. Demonstrative Pronouns Demonstrative pronouns refer to distance.
There are four:
this
that
these
those
This and these refer to things that are near. That and those refer to things that are far.
17. Interrogative Pronouns Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions.
There are five:
Who ?
Whom ?
Whose ?
Which ?
What ?
18. Indefinite Pronouns Indefinite pronouns do not refer to specific items.
There are twenty-six:
any, anyone, anybody, anything, another
some, someone, somebody, something
none, nothing, nobody, no one
everyone, everybody, everything
all, both, few, little, many, much, most, one, other, several
19. Distributive Pronouns Distributive pronouns refer to things separately
There are three:
each
either
neither
20. This completes the review of the chapter of pronouns. For additional review, see Mrs. Frow in 106 or Mrs. Geer in the library for the pronoun review folder.