• A relative pronoun is a pronoun that marks a relative clause. An example is the word which in the sentence "This is the house which Jack built." Here...
    7 KB (896 words) - 07:54, 23 October 2024
  • reciprocal pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, relative and interrogative pronouns, and indefinite pronouns.: 1–34  The use of pronouns often involves anaphora, where...
    31 KB (3,454 words) - 01:31, 30 September 2024
  • its subject). In many languages, relative clauses are introduced by a special class of pronouns called relative pronouns, such as who in the example just...
    83 KB (12,791 words) - 09:30, 10 June 2024
  • Relative clauses in the English language are formed principally by means of relative words. The basic relative pronouns are who, which, and that; who...
    38 KB (5,034 words) - 01:43, 18 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Who (pronoun)
    The pronoun who, in English, is an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun, used primarily to refer to persons. Unmarked, who is the pronoun's subjective...
    24 KB (3,235 words) - 11:28, 11 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for English pronouns
    types that are indisputably pronouns are the personal pronouns, relative pronouns, interrogative pronouns, and reciprocal pronouns. The full set is presented...
    33 KB (3,179 words) - 20:19, 22 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Arabic grammar
    dhāt-), plural אלה‎ eleh (cf. ulī). The relative pronoun is declined as follows: Note that the relative pronoun agrees in gender, number and case, with...
    80 KB (6,808 words) - 19:51, 21 October 2024
  • that some of these words also introduce relative and adverbial clauses. A clause is a content clause if a pronoun (he, she, it, or they) could be substituted...
    9 KB (1,310 words) - 22:25, 14 December 2023
  • and adjectives, as well as pronouns, had disappeared, leaving only pronoun marking. At the same time, a new relative pronoun system was developing that...
    19 KB (2,075 words) - 05:27, 6 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Punic language
    Neo-Punic M’ (mū) (originally an interrogative pronoun, 'what?') emerged as a second relative pronoun. Both pronouns were not inflected. The combination ’Š M’...
    68 KB (4,636 words) - 23:07, 1 November 2024