Pronoun
A pronoun is a word that usually takes the place of a noun previously mentioned.
| Table of contents |
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2 Personal pronouns in English 3 The Disjunctive pronoun 4 Pronouns not found in English 5 Table of correlatives 6 French language Pronouns 7 Pronouns for respect |
Introduction
Pronouns are one of the basic parts of speech, along with nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. A pronoun is the part of speech that substitutes for nouns or noun phrases and designates persons or things asked for, previously specified, or understood from the context.
For an example, take this sentence: "I give his coat to her, and she takes it." The English pronoun for "me myself" is "I". The pronoun for any male person with whom I am not speaking is "he". The pronoun for any female person with whom I am not speaking is "she". The pronoun for any one inanimate object is "it".
For another example, take these sentences: "We give you a coat," "They give me a coat." The pronoun for referring to multiple people including myself is "we". The pronoun for addressing multiple individuals is "you", but is more accurately expressed by "you all", as "you" can stand for either one or multiple people, while "you all" leaves no doubt. The pronoun used when referring to a group of people or things is "they".
Pronouns are unusual in English in that, unlike the nouns they replace, they are inflected, i.e. there are different versions of the word depending on the function it is serving in the sentence: so when a speaker uses "I" when he or she is the subject of the sentence (Nominative case), "me" when he or she is the object of the sentence (Accusative case), "my" when he or she owns something (Genitive case), and "me" when the pronoun stands on its own (Disjunctive pronoun, as in "Who's there?" "It's only me"). In other languages too, pronouns are more inflected than nouns - German is an example.
The remainder of this article explains the different kinds of pronoun in more detail.
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st nom | I | we |
| 2nd nom. | thou(1), you | you, ye, y'all(4), youse(4), you-uns(4), you-guys5 |
| 3rd nom. | he, she, it, they(3) | they |
| 1st acc | me | us |
| 2nd acc. | thee(1), you | you, ye(2) |
| 3rd acc. | him, her, it, them(3) | them |
| 1st gen | my | our |
| 2nd gen. | thy(1), your | your |
| 3rd gen. | his, her, its, their(3) | their |
| 1st noun | mine | ours |
| 2nd noun | thine(1), yours | yours |
| 3rd noun | his, hers, its, theirs(3) | theirs |
| 1st refl. | myself | ourselves |
| 2nd refl. | thyself(1), yourself(6) | yourselves(6) |
| 3rd refl. | himself, herself, itself, themself(3) | themselves |
- Sometime between 1600 and 1800, the forms of Thou began to pass out of common usage in most places, except in poetry, archaic-style literature, and descriptions of other languages' pronouns. Thou refers to either a close friend or one person. Thou still exists in northern England and Scotland, and in some Christian religious communities.
- In Scotland, Ye is the plural you. In older times and in some other places, Ye is the accusative singular you.
- Though using They as a singular pronoun when sex is not known or is not important is often condemned by traditionalists, its often found in informal speech. It is actually a revival of an earlier usage and may one day become standard usage because it is so common, and avoids ugly constructions like "he or she".
- Y'all, Youse and You-uns are often used in colloquial speech as a plural you. Saying you was and You were to distinguish the same thing is also done.
- You-guys is the new plural you. It seems to have originated in Canada.
- The only common distinction between singular and plural you is in the reflexive and emphatic forms.
The Disjunctive pronoun
The disjunctive pronoun is the form used when the pronoun stands on its own, or with only the verb "to be": for example in answer to the question "Who wrote this page?". Disjunctive pronouns in English have caused some dispute. The natural answer for most English speakers in this context would be "me", parallel to the French "moi". Unfortunately, some grammarians have argued, and persuaded parts of the educational system, that the correct answer should be "I" (perhaps under the mistaken belief that English requires the subject and copula of the verb "to be" to agree; while this is true in Latin, it is untrue in other languages, e.g. French). This leads to affected sounding usages like, "It is I!".
Pronouns not found in English
Other languages may have more personal pronouns. Some languages have three different pronouns instead of "We": one meaning "Me and you", one meaning "Me and them" and one meaning "Me, you and them". Slavic languages have two different 3rd person Genitive pronouns (example from Serbian language:)
- Ana je dala Mariji njenu knjigu. - Ana gave her (Maria's) book to Maria.
- Ana je dala Mariji svoju knjigu. - Ana gave her (Ana's) book to Maria.
Table of correlatives
Most of these other pronouns can be arranged in a table of correlatives like the one conceived by L. L. Zamenhof. Many languages form these pronouns in a similar way, so it might be just as valid for, say, another language. For English, the Table of Correlatives looks like this:
| Query | This | That | Some | No | Every | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adjective | which | this | that | some | no | every |
| Person | who | this | that | someone | no one | everyone |
| Thing | what | this | that | something | nothing | everything |
| Place | where | here | there | somewhere | nowhere | everywhere |
| Time | when | now | then | sometime | never | always |
| Way | how | thus | somehow | |||
| Reason | why |
In one of the most salient features of Indo-European languages, pronouns are ambiguous. Is 'Who' relative or interrogative? Is it true that 'that' is a relative or demonstrative? Which kind is 'which?'
Most other language families don't have this ambiguity.
Personal pronouns:
French language Pronouns
| Singular | Plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st nom. | je | nous | ||
| 1st acc. | me | nous | ||
| 1st dat. | me | nous | ||
| 1st disj. | moi | nous | ||
| 2nd nom. | tu | vous | ||
| 2nd acc. | te | vous | ||
| 2nd dat. | te | vous | ||
| 2nd disj. | toi | vous | ||
| 3rd nom. | il | elle | ils | elles |
| 3rd acc. | le | la | les | les |
| 3rd dat. | lui | lui | leur | leur |
| 3rd disj. | lui | elle | eux | elles |
The French possessive pronouns (mon, ma, mes, ton, ta, tes, son, sa, ses, notre, notre, nos, votre, votre, vos, leur, leur, leurs) are technically adjectives because they decline into masculine, feminine and plural forms and further agree with their heads (not their antecedents).
Many languages contain different pronouns used to show varying levels of respect. See T-V distinction.Pronouns for respect






