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Group 8

Intan Okrima Putri


Sekar Arin Nastiti

Pronouns
Personal
Possessive
Reflexive
Interrogative
Pronouns

A pronoun is a word that takes the


place of one or more nouns.
Personal Pronouns

Pronouns that are used to refer to people or


things are called personal pronouns.
Subject Pronouns Object Pronouns

 Used as the subject of a  Objects are subject to action


sentence by the subject.
 Usually at the beginning of  Usually at the end of the
a sentence sentence or after the verb

Example :
 I hate them
The red word is Subject & the
 They hate me
blue word is Object
 We love them
 They love us
Using Pronouns Correctly
When using a pronoun in a pair:
- *ALWAYS put the pronoun second.

Seth and I read some comic books.


(NOT: I and Seth read some comic
books.)

Science interests Mike and me.


(NOT: Science interests me and Mike.)
Using Pronouns Correctly
In formal writing and speech:
use a subject pronoun after a linking verb.

RIGHT  The winner is she.


NOT  She is the winner.
Possessive Pronouns
A pronoun that shows who or
what has something.
Possessive Pronouns
Possessive pronouns have two forms.
- One form is used before a noun.
- The other form is used alone.

Singular Plural
Used my our
Before your your
Nouns his, her, its their
Used mine ours
Alone yours yours
his, hers, its theirs
“I saw myself reflected in her eyes.”
What Are Reflexive Pronouns?

Reflexive pronouns are pronouns that refer


back to the subject of the sentence or clause.
They either end in –self, as in the singular
form, or –selves as in the plural form.
Singular Reflexive Pronouns Plural Reflexive Pronouns

Myself Ourselves

Yourself Yourselves

Himself, herself, itself Themselves


All of the mentioned reflexive pronouns are
used to rename the subjects of action verbs
and function as different types of objects.

If the reflexive pronoun is taken out of the


sentence, it won’t make sense. Let’s look at a
few examples.
Example :
 I see myself in the mirror
 She asked herself
 A cat cleaned itself at my room
Who
Whom
Whose
Interrogative Pronouns
Interrogative pronoun
 who, whom (siapa) = used as a person pronoun
 whose (punya siapa) = to ask about ownership
 whom ( Siapa) = to ask people as objects
 When = used to ask for time
 Why = used to ask a reason or cause
 which (yang mana) = as a noun, animal, or sometimes
person pronoun; which is more specific than what
 what (apa) = used as a noun or animal pronoun
Example :
What do you want for dinner ?
What is your name?
Which color do you like?
Which seat would you like?
Who is she?
Whom do you prefer to vote for?
THANKYOU 
Eko : “Which is your mother, Lily?”
Lily : “There she is; the one …… is coming here.”
A. Who
B. Whom
C. Which
D. Whose

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