Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Pronouns By: Chase Lindsey. Pronouns Definition- A word that takes the place of a noun, noun phrase, or noun clause There are several different types.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Pronouns By: Chase Lindsey. Pronouns Definition- A word that takes the place of a noun, noun phrase, or noun clause There are several different types."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pronouns By: Chase Lindsey

2 Pronouns Definition- A word that takes the place of a noun, noun phrase, or noun clause There are several different types of pronouns: Demonstrative Pronouns, Indefinite Pronouns, Interrogative Pronouns, Intensive Pronouns, Personal Pronouns, Possessive Pronouns, Reciprocal Pronouns, Reflexive Pronouns, Relative Pronouns A pronoun can function as a subject or object in a sentence. Important words: Antecedent- the word that the pronoun refers to

3 More Pronouns Demonstrative Pronoun- substitute nouns when the nouns they replace can be understood from the context. I. Ex: This; that; these; those; none and neither are Demonstrative Pronouns Indefinite Pronoun-An indefinite pronoun is a pronoun that refers to an unspecified or unidentified person or thing I. Ex: some, any, enough, several, many, much, all, both, every, each, any, anyone, anybody, either, neither, no, nobody, some, and someone Interrogative pronoun- An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun used in order to ask a question I. Ex: What, Which, Who, Whose, Whom Intensive pronoun- A pronoun ending in -self or -selves that serves to emphasize its antecedent. I.often appear as appositives after nouns; II. Ex: himself, herself, itself Personal Pronouns- A pronoun that refers to a particular person, group, or thing I.personal pronouns can take the place of nouns and noun phrases; II. Ex: I, me, we, us, you, he, she, it, him, her, it, they, them

4 More Pronouns  Possessive Pronouns- A possessive pronoun is a pronoun that can take the place of a noun phrase to show ownership I.There are four types of possessive pronouns, subject, object, adjective, and possessive Reciprocal Pronouns-A reciprocal pronoun expresses a mutual action or relationship I.Ex: each other, one another  Reflexive Pronouns- A pronoun ending in -self or -selves that's used as an object to refer to a previously named noun or pronoun in a sentence I.Reflexive pronouns usually follow verbs or prepositions. II. Reflexive pronouns are essential to the meaning of a sentence; III.Ex: myself, yourself, herself, himself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, and themselves  Relative Pronouns- A relative pronoun is a pronoun that introduces an adjective clause; I.EX: That, Which, Who, Whom, Whose

5 Pronouns in sentences He wants to know who can help him with this exercise. Everybody can go to school. Several students were excluded from our group. Several are missing. Sam is bigger than she and he is as strong as. He wanted to kick himself for even making that comment. Everybody was wondering who left our door open.

6 Workbook

7 Bibliography http://www.k12reader.com/term/indefinite-pronouns/ http://grammar.about.com/od/pq/g/pronounterm.htm http://www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/intensive_pronoun.htm http://www.esldesk.com/grammar/practice/identify-pronoun

8 Simple Sentences By: Chase Lindsey

9 What Are Simple Sentences? Definition- a simple sentence is a sentence with only one independent clause Though a simple sentence doesn't contain any subordinate clauses, it isn't always short. In order for a sentence to be a sentence it needs to have a subject and a predicate

10 EXAMPLES She was over here awhile ago. Will you come to our house for dinner.

11 Workbook 45-46

12 Bibliography http://grammar.about.com/od/pq/g/pronounterm.htm http://www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/intensive_pronoun.htm http://www.esldesk.com/grammar/practice/identify-pronoun

13 PREPOSITIONS By: Chase Lindsey

14 Prepositions A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between two other two nearby words The word preposition means positioned before. A preposition will sit before a word (a noun or a pronoun) to show that word's relationship to another nearby word The combination of a preposition and a noun phrase is called a prepositional phrase There are about 150 prepositions.

15 Examples

16 Workbook 39-40 69-72

17 Bibliography http://grammar.about.com/od/pq/g/pronounterm.htm http://www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/intensive_pronoun.htm http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/prepositions-list.htm http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=prepositions&view=detailv2&id=0D30A78B50A21BB3D 4B501EBEB525441FCD7E887&selectedindex=15&ccid=55EkQceS&simid=6080548159850437 52&thid=OIP.Me7912441c7920319517ffd930f35d62aH0&mode=overlay&adlt=strict&first=1 http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=prepositions&view=detailv2&id=0D30A78B50A21BB3D 4B501EBEB525441FCD7E887&selectedindex=15&ccid=55EkQceS&simid=6080548159850437 52&thid=OIP.Me7912441c7920319517ffd930f35d62aH0&mode=overlay&adlt=strict&first=1


Download ppt "Pronouns By: Chase Lindsey. Pronouns Definition- A word that takes the place of a noun, noun phrase, or noun clause There are several different types."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google