BY- SANJEEV RATHORE
pronoun Rules
The term pronoun covers many words, some of which do
not fall easily under the generic description of words that
replace nouns. There are several different kinds of
pronouns, including:
Personal pronouns
Demonstrative pronouns
Interrogative pronouns
pronoun Rules
Question - Error pronoun Rules
Indefinite pronouns
Possessive pronouns
Reciprocal pronouns
Relative pronouns
Reflexive pronouns
Intensive pronouns
pronoun Rules
Subjective Pronouns
•Subjective Pronouns
A subjective pronoun acts as the subject of a
sentence—it performs the action of the verb.
The subjective pronouns are he, I, it, she, they,
we, and you.
•He spends ages looking out the window.
•After lunch, she and I went to the planetarium.
pronoun
Objective Pronouns
An objective pronoun acts as the object of a sentence—it
receives the action of the verb. The objective pronouns are
her, him, it, me, them, us, and you.
•Cousin Eldred gave me a trombone.
•Take a picture of him, not us!
Rules
pronoun
Possessive Pronouns
A possessive pronoun tells you who owns something. The
possessive pronouns are hers, his, its, mine, ours, theirs, and
yours.
•The red basket is mine.
•Yours is on the coffee table.
Rules
pronoun
The Rule of joint Pronoun 123 and 231
In case of 123/231 we never use third person plural although
we use first person plural or second person plural.
Preference: First Person Pronoun > Second Person Pronoun
Ex:
•I and he submitted our report.
•You, he and I did not submit our report.
Rules
pronoun
We, you and they have to take stand against this problem.
When a sentence starts with It and after that any form of
verb be is used then pronoun must be in nominative case.
Ex:
•It is I who did this.
Rules
pronoun
After some compound conjunctions like as good as, as much
as, as well as that are used for comparison we should not put
objective case but use nominative case.
Ex:
•When it comes to give service, Lakshya is as good as he.
Rules