Pronouns
antecedent
The word or group of words to which a pronoun refers is called
intensive pronoun
adds emphasis to another noun or pronoun. It does not add information to a sentence
subject pronoun
is used as the subject of a sentence in place of a person's or thing's name or description, particularly after the subject has already been introduced
relative pronoun
is used to begin a special subject-verb word group called a subordinate clause
demonstrative pronoun
points out specific persons, places, things, or ideas
possessive pronoun
pronouns that show possession or ownership
interrogative pronoun
pronouns used to form questions
reflexive pronoun
refers back to the subject of the sentence or clause and indicates that the same person or thing is involved
indefinite pronoun
refers to a person, place, thing, or idea in a more general way than a noun does
personal pronoun
refers to a specific person, place, thing, or idea by indicating the person speaking
pronoun
A word that takes the place of a noun, a group of words acting as a noun, or another pronoun