English in Use/Pronoun Usage
General | Contents • Introduction |
Parts of speech | Articles • Nouns • Verbs • Gerunds and participles • Pronouns • Adjectives • Adverbs • Prepositions, Conjunctions and Interjections |
Other topics | Orthography • Punctuation • Syntax • Figures of Syntax • Glossary |
External | Resources |
Pronoun Usage
A pronoun comes from a Latin word that means 'for a noun'. It is a word that stands in for a noun. The English language has lots of different kinds of pronouns.
Pronouns are often divided into first, second and third person, singular and plural. First person refers to the speaker, second person refers to the person or thing being spoken to, and third person refers to a person or thing neither speaking nor being spoken to.
The first person pronoun (referring to the speaker) is 'I' or 'me' in the singular, and 'we' or 'us' in the plural. The first of each set, "I/we", is used as the subject of a verb; the second, 'me/us', is used as the object of a verb or preposition. There are also reflexive pronouns which can be made (i.e. they are the same person as the subject) by adding the suffix '-self' to the possessive (myself/ourselves).
The second person pronoun (referring to the person being spoken to) is 'you' in singular and plural, as subject or object. The reflexive is "yourself" in the singular and "yourselves" in the plural.
Introduction · About | |
Words: | Articles · Nouns · Pronouns · Verbs · Adjectives · Adverbs · Prepositions, Conjunctions, and Interjections · Verbals |
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Sentences: | Sentences Overview · Basic Components · Phrases · Clauses · Fragments and Run-on Sentences |
Usage: | Adjective and Adverb Usage · Pronoun Usage · Subject-verb Agreement · Verb Usage |
Punctuation: | End Marks · Commas · Apostrophes · Quotations · Other Common Punctuation Marks · Less Common Typographical Marks |
Other key topics: | Time and Date · Capitalization · Spelling · Figures of Syntax · Syntax · Recent Grammar Restructure Attempts |
Appendices: | Glossary · Q&A · External Resources · Common errors · History · Dictionary · Thesaurus |