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Show e Relative pronouns relates a subordinate clause—a word group that has a subject and a predicate but does not express a complete idea—to a noun our pronoun, called an antecedent, in the main part of the sentence. Such as: who, whom, whose, which, that, whoever, whomever, whichever, whatever e Interrogative pronouns introduce questions. All of the relative pronouns except that also functions as interrogative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, that, whoever, whomever, whichever e Demonstrative pronouns point things out: this, that, these, those e Reflective and intensive pronouns reverse the action of a verb, making the doer and the receiver of the action the same. An intensive pronoun lends emphasis to a noun or pronoun. Such as, myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, oneself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves e Indefinite pronouns refer to unidentified persons, places, or things. Oo One group of indefinite pronouns consistently acts as pronouns: anybody, anyone, anything, everybody, everyone, everything, nobody, no one, nothing, one, somebody, someone, something o A second group my function as either pronouns or adjectives: all, another, any, each, most, either, few, many, much, neither e Reciprocal pronouns show an interchange of action between two of more patties. Each other is used when two parties interact, one another when three or more do. |