PPT-Chapter 10: Using Pronouns Correctly
Author : briana-ranney | Published Date : 2016-06-06
Case The nominative case The objective case The possessive case Special Pronoun Problems Who and whom Appositives Reflexive pronouns Clear references Case Case
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Chapter 10: Using Pronouns Correctly: Transcript
Case The nominative case The objective case The possessive case Special Pronoun Problems Who and whom Appositives Reflexive pronouns Clear references Case Case is the form a noun or pronoun takes to show how it relates to other words in a sentence. And 57375en 57375ere Were None meets the standard for Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity for grade 8 Its structure pacing and universal appeal make it an appropriate reading choice for reluctant readers 57375e book also o57373ers students Subject . and object pronouns. . A. Subject pronouns: . 1. In the nominative case. 2. Used as the subject of a sentence. . 3. she, he, I, You, it, they, we. B. Object Pronouns. 1. In the objective case. Pronouns. Pronouns take the place of nouns. The word or phrase replaced by a pronoun is called an antecedent. . Example: When. Goldilocks . ran away . she. was screaming.. Goldilocks . is the antecedent, . Interrogative Pronouns. Definition: An interrogative pronoun ask a question. There are 5 interrogative pronouns.. Who. would like to come to the board?. Whom. will you take to the party?. Whose. car is in the driveway?. Pronouns are used in various ways to take the place of nouns. Types of pronouns. Personal. : used to replace names. 1. st. person: the person speaking (I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours). 2. nd. person: the person being spoken to (you, your, yours). What are direct and indirect objects?. There are two types of objects. Direct Objects. Indirect Objects. We are going to use the following sentence as a model for the rest of the lesson: . Jorge threw the ball to Juan.. By TEACHA2Z. ELACC4L1 a. Use relative pronouns (who, whose, whom, which, that) and relative adverbs (where, when, why).. I CAN use relative pronouns correctly.. Relative Pronouns. Lesson 1. Who and Whom. Reflexive and Intensive Pronouns. First Person:. . Second Person:. . -myself -yourself . -ourselves -yourselves . Third Person:. -herself, himself, . itself. “Nouns are the stuff in writing. In terms of writer’s craft, the well-chosen noun can be all the difference between . bug. and . cockroach. , or the writer saying “stuff” instead of a list of items that reveal something about a character or setting. Naming names gives the reader an exact image on which to focus.”. Nouns. Nouns. are words, phrases, or clauses that name. Persons. Places. Things. Or ideas. 4 Tests of a Noun. To determine whether a word or group of words is a noun, check to see if you can answer yes to at least one question below:. Nouns. Nouns are naming words.. A noun names something.. Most nouns fall into four main groups:. People. Places. Things. Ideas. Examples. People. Places. Things. Ideas . Veterinarian. Lake Mead. Bumblebee. earlier; prior to. antecedent. ante-- “before”. cedere-- “to go”. used as subject and predicate noun. Subjective. I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they. We chose teams.. The co-captains were they.. Subject & Object. Possessive. Reflexive. Interrogative. Pronouns. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns.. . pro- means for (standing FOR a noun). Personal Pronouns. Pronouns that are used to refer to people or things are called . PERSONAL PRONOUNS. POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS. REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS. OUTLINE. THIS THESE vs THAT THOSE . DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS. THIS/THESE: NEAR (CLOSE TO YOU). THAT/THOSE: FAR (FAR FROM YOU). We use . this (singular) .
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