Detailed Examination of Pronouns and Other Parts of Speech
This page delves deeper into the various types of pronouns, providing a comprehensive guide to verbs and adjectives in English grammar along with other parts of speech. The information presented here is crucial for understanding types of pronouns and their uses in different contexts.
The page begins with an extensive list of personal pronouns, including I, me, my, mine, we, us, ours, you, your, yours, he, him, his, she, they, them, their, theirs, her, hers, it, and its. This comprehensive list helps students identify and use personal pronouns correctly in various sentence structures.
Reflexive pronouns are thoroughly explained, with examples such as myself, ourselves, yourself, yourselves, himself, herself, itself, and themselves. The guide provides a clear example of their usage: "They made the costumes for themselves."
Definition: Intensive pronouns emphasize their antecedent and have no grammatical function in the sentence. They use the same forms as reflexive pronouns.
Example: "Roy painted the mural himself." In this sentence, "himself" is an intensive pronoun emphasizing that Roy did the painting.
The page continues with explanations of demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those), interrogative pronouns (who, whom, which, what, whose), and relative pronouns (that, which, who, whom, whose). Each type is clearly defined and contextualized within sentence structures.
Highlight: The section on indefinite pronouns is particularly comprehensive, listing a wide range of words including all, another, any, anybody, anyone, anything, both, each, everybody, everyone, everything, few, nothing, more, most, much, neither, nobody, none, no one, something, one, other, several, some, somebody, someone, and many.
The guide then moves on to other parts of speech, providing detailed notes on parts of speech such as adjectives, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections. Each part of speech is succinctly defined and explained in terms of its function within a sentence.
Vocabulary: Correlative conjunctions are pairs of conjunctions that work together in sentences, such as both...and, either...or, neither...nor, not only...but also, and whether...or.
The page concludes with a brief mention of interjections, providing examples like ah, ouch, ugh, wow, oops, hey, and oh. This comprehensive overview ensures students have a solid grasp of all eight parts of speech, their functions, and their interrelationships within English grammar.