Search results with tag "Demonstrative pronouns"
Structural Grammar and Spoken English - Bharsar Students
k8449r.weebly.com· Personal pronouns · Relative pronouns · Interrogative pronouns · Possessive and demonstrative pronouns · Reflexive and reciprocal pronouns Personal pronouns I, me, you, he, her, them are called personal pronouns, because they cover th e full range of grammatical persons: o the first person (I, we ) o the second person (you )
Oxford Modern English Grammar - Web Education
xn--webducation-dbb.comReflexive pronouns Table 3.6: Reciprocal pronouns Table 3.7: Relative pronouns Table 3.8: Interrogative pronouns Table 3.9: Demonstrative pronouns Table 3.10: Indefinite pronouns Table 3.11: Determinatives Table 3.12: The distributional properties of typical determinatives
Eight Parts of Speech - Anderson School District Five
www.anderson5.netPronouns Interrogative Pronouns- used to begin questions Interrogative: who, whom, whose, which, what Demonstrative Pronouns- used to point out a specific person, place, thing, or idea Demonstrative: this, that, these, those Indefinite Pronouns- used to refer to people, places, things, or ideas in general;
Subject and object pronouns and possessive adjectives
agora.xtec.catDemonstrative pronouns 7 Complete the sentences with this, that, these or those. 1 The bin is there. _____ is the bin. 2 My school bag is here. _____ is my school bag. 3 The posters are there. _____ are the posters. 4 My sisters are here. _____ are my sisters. Imperative 8 ...
Demonstrative pronouns. - Language worksheets
www.language-worksheets.comDemonstrative pronouns. Exercises. A. Use `this´ or `these´. 1. Is _____ my drink? 2. _____ aren´t my trainers. 3. Is _____ an interesting museum.
Demonstrative Pronouns - English Worksheets
englishforeveryone.orgenglish for everyone.org Name_____ Date_____ Demonstrative Pronouns • A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a proper or common noun.