Ask Question
28 August, 22:55

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

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 28 August, 23:28
    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).
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “Match the definition to the term. 1. a pronoun with no specific antecedent, as anybody, each, all, or some 2. a compound personal pronoun; ...” in 📘 English if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers