How many personal pronouns are there in English, and what are the English personal pronouns?

Updated on educate 2024-04-30
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Personal pronoun. I. He. She.

    It. You. 1.Nominative personal pronouns: i, he, she, it, you

    2.Accusative personal pronouns: me, him, she, it, you

    3.Noun possessive pronouns: mine, his, hers, its, yours

    4.Adjective possessive pronouns: my, his, her, its, your

    Demonstrative pronoun. Demonstrative pronouns are pronouns that are used to indicate or identify people or things. The demonstrative pronouns are mainly as follows:

    Near: this, these; Far fingers: That's, those.

    There are also such, same, so, it (referring to people), etc. Demonstrative pronouns are often used as subjects, objects, predicatives and predicatives in sentences.

    Reflexive pronoun. First,

    The second-person reflexive pronoun consists of the possessive pronoun of the adjective plus self, selves. Such as: myself.

    ourselves.

    yourselves, yourselves. The reflexive pronoun in the third person is formed by accusative plus self and selves. Such as:

    Himself himself, herself, herself.

    and themselves, they themselves, them, themselves.

    Interrogative pronouns. who whom, which, what, whose, are used to lead special interrogative sentences. who who refers to person, who is the subject in the sentence, who is the object, who can be replaced in the spoken language, which, whose can be used alone or modify the noun.

    When modifying a noun, the meaning of the three is different, for example: whose

    books (whose books), which

    books, what

    books (what books).

    Concatenating pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, that, what

    Relative pronouns. Only which

    whowhom

    That's four.

    Indefinite pronoun. some,any,all

    none, both, either, neither, each, every, other, another, much, many, few, little, one, etc.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    I him, she, it, you.

    1.Nominative personal pronouns: i, he, she, it, you2

    accusative personal pronouns: me, him, she, it, you3Noun possessive pronouns:

    mine,his,hers,its,yours4.Adjective possessive pronouns: my, his, her, its, your5

    Singular reflexive pronouns: myself, himself, herself, itself, yourself

    6.Plural reflexive pronouns: ourselves, themselves, themselves, themselves, yourselves

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Nominative personal pronouns: i, she, he, it, youaccusative personal pronouns: me, him, she, it, you noun subjective pronouns:

    mine, his, hers, its, yoursAdjective possessive pronouns: my, his, her, its, yourSingular reflexive pronouns: myself, himself, herself, itself, yourself

    Plural reflexive pronouns: ourselves, themselves, themselves, themselves, yourselves

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The personal pronouns in English are: i, you, he, she, it, we, you, they. Nominative i

    you he

    she it

    we you

    they accusative.

    me you

    him her

    it usyou them

    Adjective possessive pronouns.

    my your

    his her

    its our

    your their

    Noun possessive pronouns:

    mine yours

    his hers

    its ours

    yourstheirs

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    1. First person: i (me), we (we).

    2. Second person: you (you), you (you).

    3. Third person: it, he, she (it, he), they (they).

    According to the components that personal pronouns play in sentences, they can be divided into nominative personal pronouns and accusative personal pronouns. In addition, personal pronouns are divided into singular and plural, especially the second person singular and plural are written consistently, so you should pay attention to the actual translation. The generic third-person pronouns "their" and "the" can refer to people, things and things in general, including "he", "she", "it", "they", "they", "them" and "them".

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Personal pronouns are divided into (first person, second person, third person) nominative case (i, we, you, he, she, it, they); (first person, second person, third person) accusative (me, us, you, him, her, it, them);

    Possessive pronouns are divided into (first-person, second-person, third-person) adjective-like possessive pronouns (my, our, your, his, her, its, their); (first-person, second-person, third-person) noun possessor pronouns (mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its, theirs).

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The first-person pronouns are 3 words i, is....

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    1. First person.

    Singular i and plural we

    2. Second person.

    Singular you, plural you

    3. Third person: singular it, he, she, plural they English personal pronouns.

    There are nominative and accusative.

    In both forms, third-person personal pronouns also have gender variations. The nominative case is mainly used as the subject of a sentence, and can also be used as a predicate in the formal style.

    The accusative is mainly used as an object, and it is also commonly used as a predicate of a sentence in spoken language.

    In spoken language, the personal pronoun accusative can be used as the subject in short sentences where predicates and other components are omitted.

    For example: "He has read the novel." ”me too."He's seen this." "I've seen it too".

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    The 8 pronouns are shown in the table below

    The personal pronouns in English include nominative and accusative, adjective, noun and reflexive pronouns.

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