1. Mention the Kinds of Pronoun !
· Make
sentences for each kind !
Pronouns are words
that are used to replace nouns (nouns), it can be a noun humans, animals, places
and abstract concepts of he, she, it, they, his,
her, him its etc.
Types of
pronouns :
1. Personal Pronoun (personal pronoun)
Personal pronouns are pronouns that show people or naming.
Personal pronouns are pronouns that show people or naming.
Examples :
Pronouns subject
Yesterday I met the father.
2. Possessive Pronoun (possessive pronoun)
Possessive pronoun is a word that shows ownership. There are two forms of the possessive pronoun is dependent (placed before a noun) and independent (placed after a verb).
examples:
This bike belongs to them
Possessive pronoun is a word that shows ownership. There are two forms of the possessive pronoun is dependent (placed before a noun) and independent (placed after a verb).
examples:
This bike belongs to them
3. Reflexive Pronoun
Reflexive pronoun is a pronoun that refers to the perpetrator's own activities in the relevant sentence, or an emphasis on the elements of the subject or object. This gets suffix pronoun -Self for the singular, and the suffix -selves for plural.
examples:
I own that bike wash it
Reflexive pronoun is a pronoun that refers to the perpetrator's own activities in the relevant sentence, or an emphasis on the elements of the subject or object. This gets suffix pronoun -Self for the singular, and the suffix -selves for plural.
examples:
I own that bike wash it
4. Demonstrative Pronoun
Demonstrative pronouns are pronouns pointer by proximity: close (this and Reviews These) and far (that and Reviews those).
examples:
it's my money, it's your money
Demonstrative pronouns are pronouns pointer by proximity: close (this and Reviews These) and far (that and Reviews those).
examples:
it's my money, it's your money
5. interrogative Pronoun
Interrogative pronouns are words that questioned people or objects. Among others: who, Whom (who), Whose (has anybody), why (why), which (which), and what (what).
examples:
what we want
Interrogative pronouns are words that questioned people or objects. Among others: who, Whom (who), Whose (has anybody), why (why), which (which), and what (what).
examples:
what we want
6. Indefinite Pronoun
Indefinite pronoun is a pronoun that refers to someone or something that is not necessarily considered, such as: somebody (somebody), something, anything (anything), everyone (everyone), and everything (everything).
Indefinite pronoun is a pronoun that refers to someone or something that is not necessarily considered, such as: somebody (somebody), something, anything (anything), everyone (everyone), and everything (everything).
7. Relative Pronoun
Relative pronouns are words that compose a noun or noun phrase with penjelasnya clauses, such as WHO, Whom, Whose, which, and that translated into Indonesian into words.
examples:
This ariel you ever met a week ago
Relative pronouns are words that compose a noun or noun phrase with penjelasnya clauses, such as WHO, Whom, Whose, which, and that translated into Indonesian into words.
examples:
This ariel you ever met a week ago
2.
There are 3 type of questions ! what are they ? (explain)
· Give the examples for those 3 types
!
There are three basic question types:
- Yes/No: the answer is “yes or no”
- Question-word: the answer is “information”
- Choice: the answer is “in the question”
1. Yes/No questions
Sometimes the only answer that we need is yes or no. Look at
these examples:
auxiliary verb
|
subject
|
not
|
main verb
|
answer:
yes or no |
|
Do
|
you
|
want
|
dinner?
|
Yes, I do.
|
|
Can
|
you
|
drive?
|
No, I can’t.
|
||
Has
|
she
|
not
|
finished
|
her work?
|
Yes, she has.
|
Did
|
they
|
go
|
home?
|
No, they didn’t.
|
Exception! Main verb be in Present Simple and Past
Simple:
main
verb be
|
subject
|
|
Is
|
Anne
|
French?
|
Was
|
Ram
|
at home?
|
2. Question-word questions
Sometimes we want more than yes or no for an answer. When
asking for information, we usually place a question-word at the beginning of
the sentence. The question-word indicates the information that we want, for
example: where (place), when (time), why (reason), who
(person). Look at these examples:
question
word
|
auxiliary
verb
|
not
|
subject
|
main
verb
|
answer:
information |
|
Where
|
do
|
you
|
live?
|
In Paris.
|
||
When
|
will
|
we
|
have
|
lunch?
|
At 1pm.
|
|
Why
|
has
|
n't
|
Tara
|
done
|
it?
|
Because she can't.
|
Who(m)
|
did
|
she
|
meet?
|
She met Ram.
|
||
Who*
|
has
|
run
|
out?
|
Ati has run out.
|
||
Who**
|
ran
|
out?
|
Ati ran out.
|
*When the question-word is who,
it acts as the subject.
**In Present Simple and Past Simple tenses, there is no auxilary verb with who.
**In Present Simple and Past Simple tenses, there is no auxilary verb with who.
Exception. Main verb be in Present Simple and Past
Simple:
question
word
|
main
verb be
|
subject
|
Where
|
is
|
Bombay?
|
How
|
was
|
she?
|
3. Choice questions
Sometimes we give our listener a choice. We ask them to
choose between two possible answers. So their answer is (usually) already in
the question. Look at these examples:
auxiliary
verb
|
subject
|
main
verb
|
or
|
answer:
in question |
||
Do
|
you
|
want
|
tea
|
or
|
coffee?
|
Coffee, please.
|
Will
|
we
|
meet
|
John
|
or
|
James?
|
John.
|
Exception. Main verb be in Present Simple and Past
Simple:
main
verb be
|
subject
|
OR
|
||
Is
|
your car
|
white
|
or
|
black?
|
Were
|
they
|
$15
|
or
|
$50?
|
Sumber :