I'm Roger, and I take the place of nouns so you do not have to repeat the same name all day. Every pronoun I send out points back to a noun called its antecedent. Stick around, and I'll show you the whole lineup.
Who Needs a Noun?
Trailer
Section 1 · Meet the Pronouns
Sections 2–9
Meet the Pronouns
A pronoun takes the place of a noun so the same name does not repeat all day. The noun a pronoun stands for is its antecedent, and the antecedent always comes first.
Takes the Place
A pronoun steps in so the noun does not repeat all day.
Honors the Antecedent
Every pronoun points back to one antecedent noun.
Why We Use Pronouns
We use pronouns so writing does not get clunky. Without them, the same antecedent noun shows up again and again. With a pronoun, the noun appears once, and it covers every spot after that.
In a sentence
Three puppies in one sentence is two too many. The pronouns clean it up.
Now you try
A pronoun keeps the writing smooth by standing in for a thing. You could try it, this, or that. Any of them saves you the repeat.
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The Personal Pronouns
The personal pronouns are the twelve you use every day: I, me, you, we, us, he, him, it, she, her, they, them. Each can stand in for almost any noun.
In a sentence
Every bold word is a personal pronoun standing in for a noun.
Now you try
I need a personal pronoun for a group that includes you, babe. You could try we. That one puts you right in the crowd.
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Pronouns and Antecedents
The noun a pronoun replaces is its antecedent, and it always comes first. In Maria grabbed her glove, Maria is the antecedent and her points right back to her. Trace an arrow from the pronoun, and it should land on one clear noun.
In a sentence
Players is the antecedent of they. Nelson is the antecedent of he.
Now you try
Point a pronoun back at one girl, your antecedent. You could try she. That one ties straight to her.
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Subjective and Objective Pronouns
Subjective
A subjective pronoun does the action: I, you, he, she, it, we, they.
Objective
An objective pronoun receives the action: me, you, him, her, it, us, them.
Now you try
Objectify me, babe, with a pronoun that receives the action. You could try him, them, or us. Any of them takes the hit.
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Intensive and Reflexive Pronouns
Reflexive
A reflexive pronoun sends the action back to the subject. Lift it out and the sentence breaks.
Intensive
An intensive pronoun only adds emphasis. Lift it out and the sentence still works.
Now you try
Bounce the action back on a boy with a -self pronoun. You could try himself. That one loops it right around.
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Pronoun or Adjective?
Some of my words moonlight for Jake. When this, that, or which sits in front of a noun, that is Jake's adjective. When the same word stands alone in the noun's place, it is my pronoun. That coat is warm is Jake's; That is warm is mine.
In a sentence
Each bold word stands alone, with no noun behind it, so each one is a pronoun.
Now you try
Give me a demonstrative pronoun that stands alone, no noun leaning on it. You could try this or that. Either one points and holds.
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Possessive Pronouns
Possessive pronouns show ownership and stand completely alone: mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs. They are not the possessive adjectives my, your, her, which always need a noun after them.
In a sentence
Each bold word shows ownership and stands alone, so each one is a possessive pronoun.
Now you try
I am possessive, I admit it, so hand me a possessive pronoun that stands alone. You could try mine, yours, or hers. Any of them owns it outright.
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Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Singular antecedent
One antecedent takes a singular pronoun.
Plural antecedent
More than one takes a plural pronoun.
Now you try
Match the crowd with a pronoun for more than one person. You could try they. That one covers the whole group.
Files it under done
That's the whole inventory. Every pronoun you met points back to a noun, so nobody ever has to guess who you mean. The Big Pronoun Quiz is eight questions down the hall, and I've got a feeling you're going to close every one.
Or skip ahead to the quiz without checking in.