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Pronominal

Pronominal is an adjective used in linguistics to describe items that function as pronouns or otherwise refer to noun phrases without repeating them. A pronominal form substitutes for a nominal expression or marks reference to a person or thing. The term covers standalone pronouns as well as determiner-like forms that accompany a noun and serve a pronominal function.

Categories commonly described as pronominal include personal pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we, they), demonstratives

Morphology and syntax vary across languages. Pronominal elements may appear as standalone words, as clitics attached

Pronominalization, the process of replacing a noun phrase with a pronominal form, helps streamline discourse and

(this,
that),
interrogatives
(who,
what),
relative
pronouns
(which,
that),
and
possessives
(my/mine,
your/yours).
Reflexive
forms
(myself,
herself)
and
reciprocal
forms
(each
other,
one
another)
are
also
treated
as
pronominal.
In
many
analyses,
possessives
and
certain
determiners
function
pronominally
when
they
replace
a
noun
phrase.
to
verbs
or
nouns,
or
as
affixes.
In
Romance
languages,
clitic
pronouns
attach
to
the
verb
and
can
determine
word
order
or
agreement.
Some
languages
employ
pro-drop
morphology,
omitting
subject
pronouns
when
the
verb
inflection
already
encodes
person
and
number.
Pronominal
reference
also
interacts
with
anaphora
and
binding
theory,
as
pronouns
typically
rely
on
antecedents
in
discourse.
avoid
repetition.
The
study
of
pronominal
systems
covers
a
wide
range
of
phenomena,
including
agreement,
case
marking,
clitic
placement,
and
the
ways
languages
encode
deixis,
reference,
and
role
of
discourse
participants.