Pronoun

A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun to avoid repetition and to make sentences smoother and clearer. The word pronoun literally means “for a noun”.

Example:

  • Ravi is intelligent. He works hard.
    Here, he is a pronoun used instead of repeating the noun Ravi.
    In examinations, pronouns are tested not by definition but through:
  • Reference clarity
  • Agreement with antecedent
  • Gender and number consistency
  • Error detection
  • Sentence correction
    Therefore, a pronoun must be understood in relation to the noun it replaces.

The antecedent is the noun or noun phrase to which a pronoun refers.
Example:

  • The boy lost his bag.
    Here, boy is the antecedent of his.

In exams, most pronoun errors arise because the antecedent is:

  • Missing
  • Ambiguous
  • Mismatched in number or gender

Understanding antecedent-pronoun relationship is essential.

Pronouns are classified based on function and reference. The main types tested in exams are:

  1. Personal Pronoun
  2. Possessive Pronoun
  3. Reflexive and Emphatic Pronoun
  4. Demonstrative Pronoun
  5. Relative Pronoun
  6. Interrogative Pronoun
  7. Indefinite Pronoun
  8. Reciprocal Pronoun

Each type is explained with concept + exam trap clarification.

A personal pronoun refers to a person or thing and changes its form based on person, number, gender, and case.

Examples:
I, we, you, he, she, it, they, me, him, her, us, them
Personal pronouns have three cases:

  • Subjective case: I, we, he, she, they
  • Objective case: me, us, him, her, them
  • Possessive case: my, our, his, her, their

Common mistake
Using objective case as subject or vice versa.

Example:
Me and Ravi went there. ✘
Ravi and I went there. ✔

Exam rule:
Remove the other noun and check the pronoun alone.

A possessive pronoun shows ownership.
Examples:
mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its, theirs
Possessive pronouns do not take apostrophes.

Common mistake
Confusing its with it’s.

Example:
The dog lost its tail. ✔
It’s = it is ✘

Exam rule:
Possessive pronouns never use apostrophes.

A reflexive pronoun refers back to the subject of the sentence.
Examples:
myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, themselves
Example:

  • He hurt himself.

Common mistake
Using reflexive pronoun without reference to subject.

Example:
Please contact myself

Exam rule:
Reflexive pronoun must reflect back to the subject.

An emphatic pronoun is used to emphasise the subject.
Form is same as reflexive pronoun, function is different.
Example:

  • The officer himself addressed the meeting.

Key difference
Removing emphatic pronoun does not change meaning.
Removing reflexive pronoun breaks meaning.

A demonstrative pronoun points out a particular person or thing.
Examples:
this, that, these, those

Common mistake
Using demonstrative adjective instead of pronoun.

Example:
This is my book. → pronoun
This book is mine. → adjective

Exam rule:
If noun follows, it is adjective; if not, pronoun.

A relative pronoun joins two clauses and refers to a noun mentioned earlier.
Examples:
who, whom, whose, which, that
Example:

  • The man who is honest will succeed.

Common mistake

Wrong choice of who/whom.

Rule:
who → subject
whom → object

Exam rule:
Replace with he/him to decide who or whom.

An interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question.
Examples:
who, whom, whose, what, which
Example:

  • Who is there?

Common mistake
Confusing interrogative with relative pronoun.

Exam rule:
If it asks a question → interrogative.

An indefinite pronoun refers to persons or things in a general or vague way.
Examples:
someone, anyone, everyone, none, many, few, several, each, everybody

Common mistake
Wrong verb agreement.

Example:
Everyone has done his duty. ✔

Exam rule:
Indefinite pronouns are generally singular unless clearly plural.

A reciprocal pronoun shows mutual action.
Examples:
each other, one another
Example:

  • The players helped each other.

Rule
Each other → two
One another → more than two
(This distinction is sometimes tested in higher-level exams.)

A pronoun must have:

  • A clear antecedent
  • Correct number
  • Correct gender

Example of error:

  • When Ravi met Suresh, he was angry.
(unclear reference)

FAQs – PRONOUN (Exam-Oriented)

What is a pronoun?

A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun.

What is an antecedent?

The noun to which a pronoun refers.

Can a pronoun be used without an antecedent?

No, except in general references like “it is raining”.

Is “myself” a substitute for “me”?

No

Are possessive pronouns written with apostrophe?

No

Is “everyone” singular or plural?

Singular

How to choose between who and whom?

Who for subject, whom for object.

Can “this” be an adjective?

Yes, if followed by a noun.

What is a reflexive pronoun?

Yes, if followed by a noun.

Why are pronouns important in exams?

Because they affect clarity, agreement, and correctness.

Last Moment Exam Cheat Sheet – PRONOUN

  • Pronoun replaces a noun to avoid repetition.
  • Antecedent must be clear and unambiguous.
  • Subject pronoun is used as subject, object pronoun as object.
  • Possessive pronouns never take apostrophes.
  • Reflexive pronouns refer back to the subject.
  • Emphatic pronouns emphasise the subject.
  • Demonstrative pronouns point out specific things.
  • Relative pronouns join clauses and refer to nouns.
  • Indefinite pronouns are usually singular.
  • Pronoun errors often involve agreement or reference.