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Pronouns

Pronouns are words that substitute for nouns or noun phrases in sentences. They help avoid repetition and can convey information about person, number, gender, and case. Pronouns function as stand-ins for people, animals, objects, or ideas, and they can be used in various syntactic positions such as subjects or objects.

Common types include personal pronouns (subjective: I, you, he, she, it, we, they; objective: me, you, him,

Pronoun usage is also shaped by identity and inclusivity. The singular they is widely accepted as a

her,
it,
us,
them),
possessive
determiners
(my,
your,
his,
her,
its,
our,
their)
and
possessive
pronouns
(mine,
yours,
his,
hers,
ours,
theirs),
reflexive
pronouns
(myself,
yourself,
himself,
herself,
itself,
ourselves,
yourselves,
themselves),
relative
pronouns
(who,
whom,
whose,
which,
that),
demonstrative
pronouns
(this,
that,
these,
those),
interrogative
pronouns
(who,
whom,
which,
what),
and
indefinite
pronouns
(someone,
anyone,
few,
many,
all,
none).
Pronouns
interact
with
their
antecedents
in
terms
of
number
and
sometimes
gender,
and
their
use
is
guided
by
grammatical
rules
in
many
languages.
gender-neutral
option
for
referring
to
a
person
when
gender
is
unknown
or
to
respect
nonbinary
identities.
Some
speakers
adopt
other
sets,
such
as
neopronouns
(for
example,
xe/xem/xyr),
reflecting
personal
preference.
In
writing
and
speech,
pronouns
should
be
chosen
with
care
to
avoid
ambiguity
and
to
respect
individuals’
stated
pronouns,
balancing
clarity
with
sensitivity
to
evolving
language
practices.