Pronouns
Definition
Generally (but not always) pronouns stand for (pro
+ noun) or refer to a noun, an individual or individuals or thing or things
(the pronoun's antecedent) whose identity is made clear earlier in the text.
For instance, we are bewildered by writers who claim something like
- They say that eating beef is bad for you.
They is a pronoun referring
to someone, but who are they? Cows? whom do they represent? Sloppy use
of pronouns is unfair.
Not all pronouns will refer to an antecedent,
however.
- Everyone here earns over a thousand dollars a day.
The word "everyone" has
no antecedent.
The problem of agreement between a pronoun and
its antecedent and between a pronoun and its verb is treated in another section
on Pronoun-Antecedent Consistency.
The quizzes on pronoun usage are also listed at the end of that section.
This section will list and briefly describe the
several kinds of pronouns.
Personal Pronouns
Unlike English nouns, which usually do not change
form except for the addition of an -s ending to create the plural or the
apostrophe + s to create the possessive, personal pronouns (which stand
for persons or things) change form according to their various uses within a
sentence. Thus I is used as the subject of a sentence (I am happy.), me
is used as an object in various ways (He hit me. He gave me a book. Do this for
me.), and my is used as the possessive form (That's my car.) The same is
true of the other personal pronouns: the singular you and he/she/it and the
plural we, you, and they. These forms are called cases. An easily printable chart is available that shows the
various Cases of the Personal Pronouns.
Personal pronouns can also be
characterized or distinguished by person.
First person refers to the speaker(s) or writer(s) ("I" for
singular, "we" for plural). Second person refers to the person
or people being spoken or written to ("you" for both singular and
plural). Third person refers to the person or people being spoken or
written about ("he," "she," and "it" for
singular, "they" for plural). The person of a pronoun is also
demonstrated in the chart Cases
of the Personal Pronouns. As you will see there, each person can
change form, reflecting its use within a sentence. Thus, "I" becomes
"me" when used as an object ("She left me") and
"my" when used in its possessive role (That's my car");
"they" becomes "them" in object form ("I like
them") and "their" in possessive ("That's just their
way").
When a personal pronoun
is connected by a conjunction to another noun or pronoun, its case does not
change. We would write "I am taking a course in Asian
history"; if Talitha is also taking that course, we would write "Talitha
and I are taking a course in Asian history." (Notice that Talitha gets
listed before "I" does. This is one of the few ways in which English
is a "polite" language.) The same is true when the object form is
called for: "Professor Vendetti gave all her books to me"; if
Talitha also received some books, we'd write "Professor Vendetti gave all
her books to Talitha and me." For more on this, see cases of pronouns.
When a pronoun and a noun are combined (which
will happen with the plural first- and second-person pronouns), choose the case
of the pronoun that would be appropriate if the noun were not there.
- We students are demanding that the administration give us two hours for lunch.
- The administration has managed to put us students in a bad situation.
With the second person, we don't
really have a problem because the subject form is the same as the object form,
"you":
- "You students are demanding too much."
- "We expect you students to behave like adults."
Among the possessive pronoun forms, there is also
what is called the nominative
possessive: mine, yours, ours, theirs.
- Look at those cars. Theirs is really ugly; ours is beautiful.
- This new car is mine.
- Mine is newer than yours.
Demonstrative Pronouns
The family of demonstratives
(this/that/these/those/such) can behave either as pronouns or as determiners.
As pronouns, they identify or point to nouns.
- That is incredible! (referring to something you just saw)
- I will never forget this. (referring to a recent experience)
- Such is my belief. (referring to an explanation just made)
As determiners, the demonstratives
adjectivally modify a noun that follows. A sense of relative distance (in time
and space) can be conveyed through the choice of these pronouns/determiners:
- These [pancakes sitting here now on my plate] are delicious.
- Those [pancakes that I had yesterday morning] were even better.
- This [book in my hand] is well written;
- that [book that I'm pointing to, over there, on the table] is trash.
A sense of emotional distance or even disdain can
be conveyed with the demonstrative pronouns:
- You're going to wear these?
- This is the best you can do?
Pronouns used in this way would receive special stress in a spoken
sentence.
When used as subjects, the demonstratives, in
either singular or plural form, can be used to refer to objects as well as
persons.
- This is my father.
- That is my book.
In other roles, however, the reference of
demonstratives is non-personal. In other words, when referring to students,
say, we could write "Those were loitering near the entrance during the
fire drill" (as long as it is perfectly clear in context what
"those" refers to). But we would not write "The principal
suspended those for two days"; instead, we would have to use "those"
as a determiner and write "The principal suspended those students
for two days."
Relative Pronouns
The relative pronouns (who/whoever/which/that)
relate groups of words to nouns or other pronouns (The student who
studies hardest usually does the best.). The word who connects or
relates the subject, student, to the verb within the dependent clause (studies).
Choosing correctly between which and that and between who
and whom leads to what are probably the most Frequently Asked Questions
about English grammar. Generally, we use "which" to introduce
clauses that are parenthetical in nature (i.e., that can be removed from the
sentence without changing the essential meaning of the sentence). For that
reason, a "which clause" is often set off with a comma or a pair of
commas. "That clauses," on the other hand, are usually deemed
indispensable for the meaning of a sentence and are not set off with commas. The
pronoun which refers to things; who (and its forms) refers to
people; that usually refers to things, but it can also refer to people
in a general kind of way. For help with who/whom refer to the section on
Consistency. We also recommend that you take
the quizzes on the use of who and whom at the end of that
section.
The expanded form of the
relative pronouns — whoever, whomever, whatever — are known as indefinite relative pronouns. A couple
of sample sentences should suffice to demonstrate why they are called
"indefinite":
- The coach will select whomever he pleases.
- He seemed to say whatever came to mind.
- Whoever crosses this line first will win the race.
What is often an indefinite relative
pronoun:
- She will tell you what you need to know.
Indefinite Pronouns
The indefinite pronouns
(everybody/anybody/somebody/all/each/every/some/none/one) do not substitute for
specific nouns but function themselves as nouns (Everyone is wondering
if any is left.)
One of the chief difficulties we have with the
indefinite pronouns lies in the fact that "everybody" feels as though
it refers to more than one person, but it takes a singular verb. (Everybody is
accounted for.) If you think of this word as meaning "every single
body," the confusion usually disappears. The indefinite pronoun none
can be either singular or plural, depending on its context. None is
nearly always plural (meaning "not any") except when something else
in the sentence makes us regard it as a singular (meaning "not one"),
as in "None of the food is fresh." Some can be singular or
plural depending on whether it refers to something countable or noncountable.
Refer to the section on Pronoun Consistency for help on determining the
number of the indefinite pronouns (and the number [singular/plural] of the
verbs that accompany them). There is a separate section on the uses of the
pronoun one.
There are other indefinite pronouns, words that
double as Determiners:
enough, few, fewer, less, little,
many, much, several, more, most, all, both, every, each, any, either, neither,
none, some
- Few will be chosen; fewer will finish.
- Little is expected.
See the section on Pronoun Consistency for help in determining the
number (singular/plural) characteristics of these pronouns.
Intensive Pronouns
The intensive pronouns (such as myself, yourself,
herself, ourselves, themselves) consist of a personal pronoun plus self
or selves and emphasize a noun. (I myself don't know the answer.)
It is possible (but rather unusual) for an intensive pronoun to precede the
noun it refers to. (Myself, I don't believe a word he says.)
Reflexive Pronouns
The reflexive pronouns (which have the same forms
as the intensive pronouns) indicate that the sentence subject also receives the
action of the verb. (Students who cheat on this quiz are only hurting themselves.
You paid yourself a million dollars? She encouraged herself to do
well.) What this means is that whenever there is a reflexive pronoun in a
sentence there must be a person to whom that pronoun can "reflect."
In other words, the sentence "Please hand that book to myself" would
be incorrect because there is no "I" in that sentence for the
"myself" to reflect to (and we would use "me" instead of
"myself"). A sentence such as "I gave that book to myself for
Christmas" might be silly, but it would be correct.
When pronouns are combined, the reflexive will
take either the first person
- Juanita, Carlos, and I have deceived ourselves into believing in my uncle.
or, when there is no first person,
the second person:
- You and Carlos have deceived yourselves.
The indefinite pronoun (see above) one has
its own reflexive form ("One must have faith in oneself."),
but the other indefinite pronouns use either himself or themselves
as reflexives. (There is an entire page on the pronoun one.)
It is probably better to pluralize and avoid the clumsy himself or herself
construction.
- No one here can blame himself or herself.
- The people here cannot blame themselves.
Interrogative Pronouns
The interrogative pronouns (who/which/what)
introduce questions. (What is that? Who will help me? Which
do you prefer?) Which is generally used with more specific reference
than what. If we're taking a quiz and I ask "Which questions
give you the most trouble?", I am referring to specific questions on that
quiz. If I ask "What questions give you most trouble"? I could
be asking what kind of questions on that quiz (or what kind of question,
generically, in general) gives you trouble. The interrogative pronouns also act
as Determiners: It doesn't matter which beer
you buy. He doesn't know whose car he hit. In this determiner role, they
are sometimes called interrogative
adjectives.
Like the relative pronouns, the interrogative pronouns
introduce noun clauses, and like the relative pronouns,
the interrogative pronouns play a subject role in the clauses they introduce:
- We know who is guilty of this crime.
- I already told the detective what I know about it.
Reciprocal Pronouns
The reciprocal pronouns are each other and
one another. They are convenient forms for combining ideas. If Bob gave
Alicia a book for Christmas and Alicia gave Bob a book for Christmas, we can
say that they gave each other books (or that they gave books to each
other).
- My mother and I give each other a hard time.
If more than two people are involved (let's say a
whole book club), we would say that they gave one another books. This
rule (if it is one) should be applied circumspectly. It's quite possible for
the exchange of books within this book club, for example, to be between
individuals, making "each other" just as appropriate as "one
another."
Reciprocal pronouns can also take possessive
forms:
- They borrowed each other's ideas.
- The scientists in this lab often use one another's equipment.
EXERCISES
1. IS RUNNING (KEVIN)
ANSWER : HE
2. IS GREEN ( THE BLACKBOARD)
ANSWER : IT
3. ARE WATCHING TV
ANSWER : WE
4. MY GRANDPARENTS LIVE IN CALIFORNIA. OFTEN COME AND GIVE A GIFT FOR US(GRANDPARENTS)
ANSWER : THEY
5. ROBERT MADE THIS T-SHIRT
ANSWER : HIMSELF
6. EMMA, DID YOU YAKE THE PHOTO BY
ANSWER : HERSELF
7. TIM AND GARY, IF YOU WANT MORE MILK, HELP
ANSWER : YOURSELVES
8. WE OFTEN VISIT OUR AUNT IN NORWICH IS IN EAST ANGLIA
ANSWER : WHICH
9. THE CAR, DRIVER IS A YOUNG MAN, IS FROM IRELAND
ANSWER : WHOSE
10. MR. RICHARDS, IS A TAXI DRIVER, LIVES ON THE CORNER
ANSWER : WHO
sources :
http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/pronouns1.htm
http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises_list/pronomen.htm
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