Words that replace or refer to nouns (called antecedents) to avoid repetition and maintain flow in language. Types include personal (I, you, he/she/it), possessive (my, your, their), demonstrative (this, that), relative (who, which), and indefinite (anyone, someone). Pronouns change form based on their function in the sentence (subject, object, possessive).
A | ||
|---|---|---|
| anything | ||
B | ||
| both | ||
C | ||
| certain | ||
E | ||
| either | enough | |
F | ||
| few | ||
L | ||
| little | ||
M | ||
| many | mine | |
| more | most | |
N | ||
| neither | ||
| nobody | nothing | |
O | ||
| one | ||
| other | ||
S | ||
| same | self | |
| something | ||
W | ||
| which | ||
