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5 February, 16:40

Match the definition to the term.

1. a pronoun with no specific antecedent, as anybody, each, all, or some

2. a compound personal pronoun; as myself, yourself, etc. used to give emphasis to another

pronoun or a noun

3. a pronoun used in asking a question, as who or what

4. pronoun used as an adjective

5. a pronoun expressing a mutual action or relationship

6. a pronoun such as who, that, or which used to introduce an adjective clause; or the compound form, as whoever, whichever, used to introduce a noun clause; who also can be used to introduce a noun clause

7. a pronoun used when the action of the verb refers to the subject

A reciprocal pronoun

B pronominal adjective

C relative pronoun

D indefinite pronoun

E intensive pronoun

F reflexive pronoun

G interrogative pronoun

+5
Answers (1)
  1. 5 February, 16:57
    0
    Answers + Explanation:

    1 - D (They are called indefinite because there is no clearly defined antecedent).

    2 - E (While they look exactly like reflexive pronouns, intensive pronouns do not affect the meaning and are only used for emphasis).

    3 - G (Interrogative sentences or phrases are, simply put, questions).

    4 - B (Adjectives, i. e., noun-modifiers that can also be used as pronouns, e. g. "this" is an adjective in "take this bag" and a pronoun in "take this").

    5 - A (Each other and one another are the only reciprocal pronouns in English and you use them when an action is mutual).

    6 - C (Identifying relative pronouns is essential to understand relative clauses).

    7 - F (You make a compound pronoun by adding - self to the object pronoun when the subject of an action and the object are the same).
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