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Pronouns Help (page 2)

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Example:

Trent is a bricklayer. He builds homes and buildings.

The antecedent for the pronoun he is Trent.

Example:

Lydia took her to the bank.

Because there is no antecedent mentioned for the pronoun her, this sentence is unclear.

Objective case pronouns are used as objects (receivers of action) in a sentence. (See Lesson 11 for more about objects.) The following table shows the objective case personal pronouns.

Objective Case Personal Pronouns

    The following sentences show how objective case pronouns are used.
      Please give me the envelope to put in the mailbox.
      Should I send him to boarding school this year or not?
      I gave you flowers for graduation, remember?

Personal pronouns can also show possession—to whom something belongs. The following table shows the possessive case personal pronouns.

Possessive Case Personal Pronouns

    The following sentences show how possessive case pronouns are used.
      This old gray house is mine; the new white one over there is his.
      Hers, around the corner, is getting its roof replaced. My roof probably needs replacing soon. Our neighbors are getting their driveway repaved.

Tip: Remember, your is a possessive pronoun and you're is a contraction meaning "you are." Try not to confuse the two in your e-mails or other things you're writing!

Lastly, reflexive case pronouns, sometimes called selfish pronouns, are used to show a subject performing some kind of action upon itself. Reflexive pronouns can act only as objects in a sentence, never as subjects. The following table shows the reflexive case personal pronouns.

Reflexive Case Personal Pronouns

The following sentences show how reflexive pronouns are used. Notice that they are used only as objects.

      He cut himself on the edge of the can while opening it.
      It was obvious they thought of themselves as experts.
      The computerized car drove itself during the demonstration.

Demonstrative Pronouns

The four demonstrative pronounsthis, that, these, and those—refer to things in relation to number and distance. These pronouns can act as a subject or an object, as the following table shows.

Demonstrative Pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns look like this in sentences:

      This tastes awful, Mom!
      I should take these and give them to Shelly.
      Those are his, not yours.
      I want that for my collection.

Relative Pronouns

The relative pronounsthat, which, who, and whom— relate (or refer back) to another noun that precedes it in the sentence, and introduce clauses that describe earlier nouns or pronouns.

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