English Pronouns: Types and Usage Guide for Students
Pronouns are words that replace noun phrases (NPs) to avoid repetition and to manage reference in discourse. The NP that a pronoun replaces is called its antecedent. Understanding pronouns is essential for accurate grammar, clear writing, and effective communication at the university level.
Definition: A pronoun is a word that substitutes for a noun phrase; its antecedent is the NP it replaces.
English has eight major pronoun categories:
Each category has distinct functions and form restrictions. Personal, possessive, and reflexive pronouns vary by person, number, and sometimes gender.
Definition: Subject pronouns act as the grammatical subject; object pronouns receive the action.
| Person | Subject | Object |
|---|---|---|
| 1st singular | I | me |
| 2nd singular | you | you |
| 3rd singular (m) | he | him |
| 3rd singular (f) | she | her |
| 3rd singular (n) | it | it |
| 1st plural | we | us |
| 3rd plural | they | them |
Definition: Possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs) replace noun phrases that show possession; possessive determiners (my, your, his, her, its, our, their) modify nouns directly and cannot stand alone.
| Person | Determiner | Pronoun |
|---|---|---|
| 1st singular | my | mine |
| 2nd singular | your | yours |
| 3rd singular (m) | his | his |
| 3rd singular (f) | her | hers |
| 1st plural | our | ours |
| 3rd plural | their | theirs |
Definition: Reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves) refer back to the subject and always function as objects.
Definition: Demonstrative pronouns (this, these, that, those) point to entities in space or time and also indicate singular/plural.
Definition: Universal pronouns refer to whole groups or every member of a group (all, each, everybody, everyone).
Definition: Indefinite pronouns refer to non-specific persons or things (some, any, someone, anyone, something, anything, none, nobody, no one, nothing).
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Klíčové pojmy: Pronouns replace noun phrases; antecedent is the NP they refer to., Subject pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we, they; object pronouns: me, you, him, her, it, us, them., Possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs) stand alone; possessive determiners (my, your, his, her, our, their) modify nouns., Reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, himself, etc.) refer back to the subject and function as objects; can be emphatic., Demonstratives: this/these (near), that/those (far); mark number and proximity., Universal pronouns: all (sing./pl.), each (always singular), everybody/everyone (grammatically singular)., Indefinite pronouns: some vs any distribution; many/few for count nouns, much/little for noncount nouns., Reciprocal pronouns: each other (two) and one another (three or more), often interchangeable., Wh-pronouns: interrogatives (what, who, when) ask questions; relatives (who, which, that) introduce adjective clauses., Use explicit nouns when pronoun antecedents are ambiguous; ensure pronoun-antecedent agreement.