Personal Pronouns
Reflexive & Intensive Pronouns
Demonstrative & Interrogative Pronouns
Indefinite Pronouns
Pronouns & Antecedents
100

What is a pronoun that replaces a specific person or thing called?

A personal pronoun.

100

What ending do reflexive and intensive pronouns usually have?

 -self or -selves.

100

Name the four demonstrative pronouns

This, that, these, those.

100

What is an indefinite pronoun?

A pronoun that doesn’t refer to a specific person or thing.

100

What is an antecedent?



The noun that a pronoun replaces or refers to.

200

Replace the underlined noun with a personal pronoun:
Emily loves to write short stories.

She.

200

Identify whether the pronoun is reflexive or intensive:
“He made the cake himself.”


Intensive

200

Identify the interrogative pronoun:
“Who wrote that famous short story?”


Who.

200

Identify the indefinite pronoun:
“Everyone enjoys O. Henry’s short stories.”


Everyone.

200

Identify the antecedent of “their” in this sentence:
“The students read their grammar books.”


 Students.

300

Identify the personal pronouns:
He moved to Texas where he lived on a cattle ranch.

He, he.

300

Identify whether the pronoun is reflexive or intensive:
“She reminded herself to buy milk.”

Reflexive.

300

Which demonstrative pronoun would you use for something near you and singular?


This.

300

Choose the correct indefinite pronoun:
“None of the cookies are left.”


None

300

Find the pronoun and its antecedent:
“O. Henry wrote many stories. They are still famous today.”


They → stories.

400

Choose the correct pronoun:
“My brother and ___ are going to the library.”

I

400

Explain the difference between a reflexive and an intensive pronoun.

Reflexive pronouns reflect action back on the subject; intensive pronouns add emphasis.


400

Identify the pronoun and its type:
“Which of these books is yours?”

Which – interrogative pronoun.

400

True or False: Indefinite pronouns can be singular or plural.




True

400

Fix the pronoun–antecedent agreement error:
“Every student should bring their pencil to class.”

Every student should bring his or her pencil to class.


500

Explain why “it” is considered a personal pronoun even though it doesn’t refer to a person.

It replaces a specific noun (thing, idea, or animal), just like other personal pronouns replace people.

500

Rewrite this sentence using a reflexive pronoun:
“James blamed ___ for the mistake.”


Himself.

500

Fill in the blank with a correct demonstrative pronoun:
“Editors were soon bidding for more of ___.

These

500

Identify all the indefinite pronouns in this sentence:
“Another of Porter’s stories is ‘The Gift of the Magi,’ and each has a surprise ending.”


Another, each

500

What problem can happen in a sentence if the antecedent of a pronoun is unclear?

The reader may not know what the pronoun refers to, which makes the sentence confusing or misleading.