3GA. Pronouns Grammar Activities

Jonathon Reinhardt and Dilara Avci

These activities are designed for the content in 3. Pronouns. All corpus analysis activities are in 3CA. Corpus Activities for Pronouns


Activity 3.1 Pronouns in a speech by Barack Obama

a.

b.

⇒ Return to 3.1 What is a pronoun?

Activity 3.1.1 Referents, antecedents, & postcedents

⇒ Return to 3.1.1 Referents, Antecedents, & Postcedents


Activity 3.2.1 Is the pronoun singular or plural?

⇒ Return to 3.2.1 Number: singular or plural

Activity 3.2.2 Is the pronoun a subject or an object?

⇒ Return to 3.2.2 Case: Subject or Object

Activity 3.2.4 Gender & agreement

⇒ Return to 3.2.4 Gender: feminine, masculine, neuter, neutral


Activity 3.3.1 Personal Pronoun Chart

⇒ Return to 3.3.1 Personal pronouns

Activity 3.3.2 Possessive Pronouns

⇒ Return to 3.3.2 Possessive Pronouns

Activity 3.3.3 Is the reflexive pronoun an object or an appositive?

⇒ Return to 3.3.3 Reflexive Pronouns


Activity 3.4.1 Which uses demonstrative pronouns?

Read the two tweets:

A.

B.

 

⇒ Return to 3.4.1 Demonstrative Pronouns

Activity 3.4.2 Which indefinite pronouns are singular and/or plural? 

⇒ Return to 3.4.2 Indefinite Pronouns

Activity 3.4.3 Which are interrogative and which are relative pronouns? 

⇒ Return to 3.4.3 Interrogative Pronouns


3.5 Comprehensive Activities on Pronouns

a. Find the transcript of episode of a well-known television program in English, for example ‘Friends’, a famous situation comedy from the 1990s. Find 2 examples each of the 7 different pronoun types, and include the full sentence context around it. If the pronoun type can act as a subject or an object, include one of each.

b. Read “A Very Short Story” by Ernest Hemingway (1924) and note how the author uses personal pronouns.

What person is it written in? What is the antecedent of ‘him’ in the first line, and ‘he’ throughout the story? Why do you think the author omits this referent, as opposed to using ‘she’ sometimes for ‘Luz’? What effect does this have? What would the effect be if it were the other way around, that is, if you used ‘Pablo’ (or some other name) for ‘he’ sometimes, and change all uses of ‘Luz’ to ‘she’ or ‘her’? 

c. Analyze these two texts — both are from email solicitations for donations, one from a conservative US Congressional candidate and the other from ‘Rainbow Railroad’, a Canadian organization that advocates for LGBTQI+ people. Identify the pronouns and interpret how each message uses them, and to what effect.

c1.

c2. 

⇒ Return to 3. Pronouns


Module authors: Jonathon Reinhardt & Dilara Avci

Last updated: 6 December 2023


This module is part of Modern English Grammar and the Power of Language, a open educational resource offered by the Clarify Initiative customized for English 406, a course at the University of Arizona. The Clarify Initiative is a privately funded project with the goal of raising critical language awareness and media literacy among students of language and throughout society.

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Modern English Grammar and the Power of Language Copyright © 2023 by Jonathon Reinhardt, Anuj Gupta, Robert Poole, Dilara Avci is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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