Pronoun Case
Possessive Case
Intensive Pronouns
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Vague Pronouns
100

This pronoun case is used for words that receive an action.

Something is being done to or for this pronoun.

Objective case

100

Pronouns in the possessive case do this.

Show ownership

100

Intensive pronouns all contain a form of the suffix _.

self

100

The noun that a pronoun refers back to or replaces.

Antecedent

100

A a pronoun that is unclear.

Vague pronoun

200

This pronoun case is used for words that perform an action.

This pronoun is doing something.

Subjective case

200

Help, I have lost _ homework!

my

200

She gave _ a pat on the back.

herself

200

A singular pronoun for a male person that can be used as a subject.

He

200

A word that means having more than one possible meaning.

Ambiguous

300

_ and her brother are going on vacation soon!

She

300

I know that belongs to Brian, so stop saying it is _.

yours

300

John and I were very happy with _ after we won the competition.

ourselves

300

I went to the store, but I couldn't find _ favorite snack.

my

300

The vague pronoun in the sentence: It was really difficult, but I had fun.

It

400

My mother gave my brother and _ a big hug before she left.

me

400

_ lunch money did you find on the floor?

Whose

400

The dog accidentally tripped _ when it tried to carry that huge blanket in its mouth.

itself

400

Pronouns that show someone speaking directly to another person/people.

Second-person pronouns

400

The vague pronoun in the sentence: Gina and Danielle were both twelve, but she was a month older.

she

500
To _ are you speaking right now?

whom

500

The dog chased _ tail.

its

500

You should all check _ for ticks after the hike.

Yourselves

500

Sylvia and Samuel are friends, so _ interests are mostly similar.

their

500

The vague pronoun in the sentence: I tried to twist the screw with the screwdriver, but it broke.

it