Pronouns PDF
Pronouns PDF
Pronouns PDF
A pronoun is a word that refers to or takes the place of a noun. The noun being referred to is
called the antecedent. The identity of the pronoun is made clear by the antecedent. For exam-
ple:
In this example, the pronoun he is refer-
The boy said that he was tired. ring back to the noun (antecedent) boy.
Antecedent Pronoun
There are many different types of pronouns: personal, possessive, reflexive, in-
tensive, demonstrative, interrogative, relative, indefinite, and reciprocal.
Personal Pronouns are pronouns that refer to a specific person or thing in a sen-
tence and can be divided into two groups: nominative and objective.
Nominative personal pronouns can act as the subject of a sentence (I, you, he, she, it, we,
they). For example:
I went to the store after work. You should not go to class if you are sick.
Objective personal pronouns, on the other hand, act as objects of a sentence (me, you, him,
her, it, us, them). For example:
Alex came out with Joe and me. Melissa really likes him.
Reflexive Pronouns are pronouns that are used to show that the subject of
the sentence is receiving the action of the verb (myself, yourself, himself,
herself, itself, ourselves, themselves). For example:
She can handle the situation herself. We can write the paper ourselves.
Personal Personal Possessive Reflexive
(Nominative) (Objective)
I me my/mine myself
you you your/yours yourself
he him his himself
she her her/hers herself
it it its itself
we us our/ours ourselves
they them their/theirs themselves
Intensive Pronouns are pronouns that are used only to place emphasis on the
subject and are not essential to the meaning of the sentence. Note: These
pronouns look the same as reflexive pronouns, but they act differently in the
sentence and are always placed next to the subject that they are emphasizing (myself, yourself,
himself, herself, itself, ourselves, themselves). For example:
Demonstrative Pronouns are pronouns that are used to identify nouns and
answer the question which one? (this, that, these, those) For example:
Relative Pronouns are pronouns that are used to connect clarifying infor-
mation to nouns or other pronouns within a sentence (who, that, which,
whom, whose, whoever, whichever, whomever, whatever).
Who vs. Whom
Who is used when referring to a subject. Whom is used when referring to an object.
Who went to the store after work? With whom did Alex go out?
Who sings this song? The letter should be addressed to whom?
Note: Refer back to the Personal Pronouns section on page 1 of this skills page. Who works like a nominative pro-
noun, while whom works like an objective pronoun.
Who vs. That
Who is used to refer to people or animals with names. That is used to refer to things.
Liz, who wrote the review, got in trouble. The paper that I wrote last night vanished.
Which is used in nonessential clauses (clauses unnecessary for understanding the subject of a sentence).
My moms jewelry was stolen, which upset her very much.
*The subject is clear without the additional information.
Note: For more information on essential and nonessential clauses, see the skills page on Independent and Dependent
Clauses.
Note: Singular indefinite pronouns must always take singular verbs. For more information on indefinite pronouns, see
the skills page on Pronoun Antecedent Agreement.
Note: It is also important to be clear when using pronouns. For example: He really should not do that.
(Who is he? What is that?)
For more information, please refer to the skills page on Pronoun Antecedent Agreement.