others are demonstrative pronouns and indefinite pronouns. Other members are disputed (see below). Pronouns in formal modern English. Those types that are...
33 KB (3,179 words) - 20:19, 22 October 2024
personal pronouns of English, see Old English pronouns. The pronoun you (and its other forms) can be used as a generic or indefinite pronoun, referring...
27 KB (2,749 words) - 10:28, 19 November 2024
a pronoun is "you", which can be either singular or plural. Sub-types include personal and possessive pronouns, reflexive and reciprocal pronouns, demonstrative...
32 KB (3,494 words) - 03:06, 21 November 2024
For specific details of the personal pronouns used in the English language, see English personal pronouns. Pronoun is a category of words. A pro-form is...
26 KB (3,394 words) - 14:50, 21 November 2024
equivalents of "who, when, where" were used only as interrogative pronouns and indefinite pronouns, as in Ancient Greek and Sanskrit. Besides þā ... þā ..., other...
84 KB (8,365 words) - 19:29, 11 November 2024
Modern English had two second-person personal pronouns: thou, the informal singular pronoun, and ye, the plural (both formal and informal) pronoun and the...
45 KB (5,210 words) - 09:35, 24 November 2024
There are also Cantonese pronouns and Hokkien pronouns. Chinese pronouns differ somewhat from English pronouns and those of other Indo-European languages...
19 KB (1,454 words) - 23:49, 17 November 2024
Neopronoun (redirect from Noun-self pronouns)
pronouns. Neopronouns may be words created to serve as pronouns, such as "ze/hir", or derived from existing words and turned into personal pronouns,...
15 KB (1,280 words) - 18:33, 22 September 2024
distinct Old English dual forms were lost), but pronouns, unlike nouns, retained distinct nominative and accusative forms. Third person pronouns also retained...
65 KB (5,563 words) - 03:11, 25 November 2024
The Spivak pronouns are a set of gender-neutral pronouns in English promulgated on the virtual community LambdaMOO based on pronouns used in a book by...
18 KB (1,834 words) - 02:33, 4 November 2024
full range of English pronouns, include the subject pronouns he or she (23), the object pronouns him or her (24), the possessive pronoun his or hers (25)...
111 KB (11,090 words) - 00:50, 22 November 2024
others is known as it. Generic antecedents Gender-specific pronoun English personal pronouns Homo and Mensch are Latin and German words respectively which...
19 KB (2,075 words) - 05:27, 6 September 2024
Preferred gender pronouns (also called personal gender pronouns, often abbreviated as PGP) are the set of pronouns (in English, third-person pronouns) that an...
61 KB (5,444 words) - 23:07, 16 November 2024
whosesoever (see also "-ever"). The interrogative and relative pronouns who derive from the Old English singular interrogative hwā, and whose paradigm is set out...
24 KB (3,235 words) - 11:28, 11 August 2024
language had demonstrative pronouns, equivalent to this and that, but did not have the definite article the. The Old English period is considered to have...
63 KB (6,035 words) - 12:06, 23 November 2024
Spanish pronouns in some ways work quite differently from their English counterparts. Subject pronouns are often omitted, and object pronouns come in...
18 KB (2,520 words) - 15:27, 7 August 2024
Singular they (redirect from Gender-neutral third person singular pronoun in English)
pronoun. He suggests that pronouns used as "variables" in this way are more appropriately regarded as homonyms of the equivalent referential pronouns...
114 KB (11,524 words) - 19:14, 18 November 2024
context. In English, pronouns mostly function as pro-forms, but there are pronouns that are not pro-forms and pro-forms that are not pronouns.: 239 Examples...
15 KB (1,659 words) - 20:25, 25 October 2024
pronoun is a pronoun which does not have a specific, familiar referent. Indefinite pronouns are in contrast to definite pronouns. Indefinite pronouns...
10 KB (762 words) - 17:59, 30 October 2024
or the object of a preposition. Object pronouns contrast with subject pronouns. Object pronouns in English take the objective case, sometimes called...
5 KB (476 words) - 23:46, 17 July 2024
while others call my a possessive adjective and mine a possessive pronoun. Other pronouns may be capitalized when referring to the Deity ("God's in His heaven")...
14 KB (1,137 words) - 02:05, 17 October 2024
Ireland, to distinguish from the singular "you". In Old English, the use of second-person pronouns was governed by a simple rule: þū addressed one person...
4 KB (546 words) - 23:50, 14 November 2024
pronouns (such as woman, daughter, husband, uncle, he and she) to refer specifically to persons or animals of one or other sexes and neuter pronouns (such...
34 KB (4,042 words) - 11:00, 24 November 2024
You (redirect from You (pronoun))
Proto-Indo-European *yu- (second-person plural pronoun). Old English had singular, dual, and plural second-person pronouns. The dual form was lost by the twelfth...
17 KB (1,480 words) - 09:26, 18 September 2024
That means that pronouns can seldom be translated from English to Japanese on a one-to-one basis. The common English personal pronouns, such as "I", "you"...
61 KB (4,885 words) - 11:54, 18 November 2024
Non-reflexive use of reflexive pronouns is rather common in English. Most of the time, reflexive pronouns function as emphatic pronouns that highlight or emphasize...
47 KB (4,896 words) - 15:36, 29 October 2024
personal pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, relative pronouns, interrogative pronouns, and some others, mainly indefinite pronouns. The full set of English pronouns...
86 KB (11,122 words) - 04:48, 21 November 2024
French personal pronouns Intensive pronoun Irish morphology Subjective pronoun Weak pronoun Copula John Collinson Nesfield (1922). English Grammar, Past...
4 KB (464 words) - 00:15, 7 May 2024
the Bible. English personal pronouns Gender neutrality in languages with gendered third-person pronouns Generic antecedent Third-person pronoun See reverential...
8 KB (767 words) - 15:16, 5 November 2024
(–s) to mark plurals, but pronouns typically do not. (The pronoun one is an exception, as in I like those ones.) English pronouns are also more limited than...
62 KB (8,248 words) - 17:10, 29 August 2024