Pronouns are words such as `it', `this', and `nobody' which are used in a sentence like noun groups containing a noun. Some pronouns are used in order to avoid repeating nouns. For example, you would not say `My mother said my mother would phone me this evening'. You would say `My mother said she would phone me this evening'.
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You use a pronoun instead of a noun group containing a noun, not in addition to a noun group. For example, you do not say `My mother she wants to see you'. You say either `My mother wants to see you' or `She wants to see you'.
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In this entry, information is given on personal pronouns, possessive pronouns, reflexive pronouns, and indefinite pronouns.
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Words such as `many' and `some' which are used to refer to quantities of people or things can also be used as pronouns. See section on
pronoun use in entry at ↑
Quantity.
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`One' can be used to replace a noun group, but can also be used to replace a noun within a noun group. See entry at ↑
one.
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◊ personal pronouns
Personal pronouns are used to refer to something or someone that has already been mentioned, or to the speaker or hearer. There are two sets of personal pronouns: subject pronouns and object pronouns.
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Subject pronouns are used as the subject of a verb. The subject pronouns are:
I do the washing; he does the cooking; we share the washing-up.
My father is fat — he weighs over fifteen stone.
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Object pronouns are used as the direct or indirect object of a verb, or after a preposition. The object pronouns are:
The nurse washed me with cold water.
I'm going to read him some of my poems.
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Note that you do not use an object pronoun as the indirect object of a verb when you are referring to the same person as the subject. Instead you use a
reflexive pronoun.
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Note that `me', not `I', is used after `it's' in modern English.
`Who is it?' —-`It's me.'
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`We' and `us' can be used either to include the person you are talking to or not to include the person you are talking to. For example, you can say `We must meet more often', meaning that you and the person you are talking to must meet each other more often. You can also say `We don't meet very often now', meaning that you and someone else do not meet very often.
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`You' and `they' can be used to refer to people in general.
You have to drive on the other side of the road on the continent.
They say she's very clever.
For more information about this, see entry at ↑
one.
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`They' and `them' are sometimes used to refer back to indefinite pronouns referring to people. For more information, see entry at ↑
he - they.
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`It' is used as an impersonal pronoun in general statements about the time, the date, the weather, or a situation. See entry at ↑
it.
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◊ possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns show who the person or thing you are referring to belongs to or is connected with. The possessive pronouns are:
`What's your name?' —-`Frank.' —-`Mine's Laura.'
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There is no possessive pronoun `its'.
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Possessive pronouns can be used after `of'. See entry at ↑
of.
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◊ reflexive pronouns
Reflexive pronouns are used as the object of a verb or preposition when the person or thing affected by an action is the same as the person or thing doing it. The reflexive pronouns are:
She stretched herself out on the sofa.
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For more information about this use of reflexive pronouns, see section on
reflexive verbs in entry at ↑
Verbs.
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Reflexive pronouns are also used after nouns or pronouns to emphasize them.
I myself have never read the book.
The town itself was so small that it didn't have a bank.
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They are also used at the end of a clause to emphasize the subject.
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Reflexive pronouns are also used at the end of a clause to say that someone did something without any help from anyone else.
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You can also indicate that someone did something without any help, or that someone was alone, by using a reflexive pronoun after `by' at the end of a clause.
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◊ indefinite pronouns
Indefinite pronouns are used to refer to people or things without indicating exactly who or what they are.
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The indefinite pronouns are:
anybody, anyone, anything, everybody, everyone, everything, nobody, no-one, nothing, somebody, someone, something
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You always use singular verbs with indefinite pronouns.
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However, the plural pronouns `they', `them', or `themselves' are often used to refer back to an indefinite pronoun referring to a person. See entry at ↑
he - they.
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You can use adjectives immediately after indefinite pronouns.
There is nothing extraordinary about this.
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