What is a noun?
a person, place, thing, or idea
What is a pronoun?
A pronoun is a word that is used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns.
What is an adjective?
a word that modifies a noun or pronoun.
What is the difference between a demonstrative pronoun and a demonstrative adjective?
A demonstrative adjective modifies the noun or pronoun it refers to while a demonstrative pronoun stands alone.
Name five reflexive/intensive pronouns.
himself, herself, myself, themselves, ourselves, itself, yourself
Name the nouns in this sentence.
Honking cars and chattering pedestrians filled the streets.
cars, pedestrians, streets
Name the pronouns in the sentence.
Have you turned in your report?
you, your
Name the adjectives in the sentence.
When the nervous student answered the difficult question, he got it right.
nervous, difficult, right
Name all the demonstratives.
this, that, those, these
Is the pronoun reflexive or intensive?
I ask myself that every day.
reflexive
DAILY DOUBLE!
Name the nouns in this sentence.
Monica and I went shopping in Paris, and we each brought back two large suitcases!
Monica, Paris, suitcases
Name the pronouns in the sentence.
Can you take these to the garbage before you clean it up?
you, these, you, it
Name the adjectives in the sentence.
The black and white cow is very kind.
black, white, kind.
Does this sentence use a demonstrative adjective or demonstrative pronoun?
I thought that was you.
demonstrative pronoun
Is the pronoun reflexive or intensive?
I myself saw a spaceship, so aliens are real.
intensive
Name the nouns in this sentence.
The store closed early, so James had to battle traffic on his way to the other store.
store, James, traffic, way, store
Name the pronouns in the sentence.
After they finish their work, they need to take these papers and finish filing them.
they, their, they, them
DAILY DOUBLE!
Name the adjectives in the sentence.
The late bus stopped at the Manteca bus stop, and a tired girl entered.
late, Manteca, tired
Does this sentence use a demonstrative adjective or demonstrative pronoun?
She wished he had bought those earrings when she had a chance.
demonstrative adjective
Are the pronouns reflexive or intensive?
After he did his homework himself, he gave himself a pat on the back.
intensive, reflexive
Name the nouns in this sentence.
The bustling city streets were filled with a kaleidoscope of vibrant markets, lively cafes, and diverse communities, creating a dynamic and captivating urban landscape.
streets, kaleidoscope, markets, cafes, communities, landscape
Name the pronouns in the sentences.
I want to fix them myself before he who never makes mistakes sees them and replaces them with these.
I, them, myself, he, who, them, them, these
Name the adjectives in these sentences.
The magnificent, shimmering, golden sunset cast a warm glow over the tranquil, azure ocean creating a breathtaking, serene scene.
magnificent, shimmering, golden, warm, tranquil, azure, breathtaking, serene
Does this question use a demonstrative adjective or demonstrative pronoun?
Are these the papers you were missing?
demonstrative pronoun
Describe the difference between a reflexive pronoun and an intensive pronoun.
The reflexive pronoun reflects the subject while an intensive pronoun emphasizes a noun or pronoun.
An intensive pronoun can be removed from the sentence, and it still makes sense.