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You all know these words very well and use them every day in your speech, for example, my cat, your pen, his parents. What do these pronouns have in common? You will learn about this in this lesson on possessive pronouns.

Topic: Pronoun

Lesson: Possessive Pronouns

1. The meaning of possessive pronouns, their connection with personal pronouns.

All possessive pronouns indicate that an object or objects belong to a specific person or persons. Possessive pronouns answer questions whose? whose? whose? whose?

For example: This piece is mine, this one is yours.

Possessive pronoun my indicates ownership by the 1st person, i.e. to the speaker is yours- to belong to the 2nd person - the one with whom they are speaking, pronoun his- to the 3rd party, i.e. a person not participating in the dialogue. They all answer the question whose?

Copy the poem and underline the endings in the possessive pronouns. Put questions from nouns to pronouns. Prove that possessive pronouns change like adjectives. Our carpet is a flower meadow, Our walls are giant pine trees,

Our roof is a blue sky, Our happiness is to live such a destiny. Yu. Entpin

Eliminate shortcomings in the use of pronouns.

This is my suitcase, I need to put my things here. Can I leave my suitcase here? I met my friend.

2. About possessive pronouns ().

Literature

1. Russian language. 6th grade: Baranov M.T. and others - M.: Education, 2008.

2. Russian language. Theory. 5-9 grades: V.V. Babaytseva, L.D. Chesnokova - M.: Bustard, 2008.

3. Russian language. 6th grade: ed. MM. Razumovskaya, P.A. Lekanta - M.: Bustard, 2010.

, interrogative, relative, index fingers, definitive, negative, mutual And uncertain.

Personal pronouns

face units h.,
Cases - im. (rd., dt., int., tv., etc.)
pl. h.,
Cases - im. (rd., dt., int., tv., etc.)
1 l. (me, me, me, me/me, about to me) we (us, us, us, us, O us)
2 l. you (you, you, you, you/you, O you)
You (you, you, you, you, about you)
you (you, you, you, you, O you)
3 l. he (his/him, him/him, his, him/him, O him)
she (her/her, her/her, her, her/her/her/her, O her)
it (his/him, him/him, his, him/him, O him)
they (their/them, them, their/them, them/them, O them)

Personal pronouns indicate the person being spoken about. 1st and 2nd person pronouns designate participants in speech ( I, You, We, You). 3rd person pronouns indicate a person or persons not taking part in the speech ( He, she, it, They).

Some languages ​​also have an indefinite personal pronoun that replaces an arbitrary subject regardless of gender - for example, French. on and German man.

Reflexive pronoun

Transfers the meaning of the direction of action to the subject of action ( I see myself in the mirror).

Declined by cases:

  • myself ( rd. , ext. cases), self ( dt. , etc.), by yourself, by yourself ( TV).

Literature

  • Pronoun//Russian language. - " Printhouse ": Publishing house "Astrel", 2003. - P. 3. ISBN 5-271-06781-5

Wikimedia Foundation.

2010.

    See what “Pronoun” is in other dictionaries: PRONOUN, pronouns, cf. (gram.). The name of one of the parts of speech is a word that in itself does not mean a specific object or number (unlike the name of a noun, adj., number), but acquires such a meaning depending on the given speech (lit.... ...

    Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary PRONOUN, part of speech, a class of words that indicate a person, object or attribute without naming them (he, this, such, etc.). The categories of pronouns are distinguished by meaning, for example in Russian personal, reflexive, possessive, interrogative... ...

    Modern encyclopedia Part of speech is a class of words that indicate an object (person) or sign without naming it (he, this, such, etc.). The categories of pronouns are distinguished by meaning, for example. in Russian, personal, reflexive, possessive, interrogative,... ...

    Big Encyclopedic Dictionary PRONOUN, I, Wed. In grammar: a word (noun, adjective, numeral or adverb) in a sentence that indicates an object or attribute and replaces the corresponding nouns and adverbs. Personal, reflexive, demonstrative... ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary Pronoun - PRONOUN (lat. pronomen). M mi called such nouns (see) and adjectives (see) that are not names of independent objects or certain characteristics of objects, regardless of the given speech, but only indicate ... ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary- PRONOUN, part of speech, a class of words that indicate a person, object or sign without naming them (“he”, “it”, “such”, etc.). The categories of pronouns are distinguished by meaning, for example in Russian personal, reflexive, possessive,... ... Illustrated Encyclopedic Dictionary

    A class of words whose relationship to parts of speech is controversial: their unity is obvious, but they are found in all parts of speech. The task of pronouns is to point to them without naming phenomena of reality (as ordinary words do). To indicate... ... Literary encyclopedia

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary- Pronoun is a lexical semantic class of significant words, the meaning of which includes either a reference to a given speech act (to its participants, a speech situation, or to the utterance itself), or an indication of the type of speech correlation of the word with... ... Linguistic encyclopedic dictionary

    I; Wed Linguistic A part of speech that includes words that indicate or name objects or their characteristics without revealing their content, and appear in speech instead of words related to a noun, adjective or numeral. Personal... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

It's hard to say how we would manage without pronouns. Without them it is impossible to construct almost a single phrase. Here, for example, are the previous two. That is, of course, it is possible. But why bother?

If you put together all the pronouns in the Russian language, you will get an impressive document. But it doesn’t make sense to simply lump everything together. Therefore, we have prepared a special article for you. It contains all the basic information about the categories of pronouns, their grammatical features and spelling, as well as a sample of morphological analysis. Special tables will help you better master all the necessary knowledge about pronouns in the Russian language. And examples from literary works will help to more clearly imagine how the grammatical characteristics of pronouns are implemented in practice.

What are pronouns

Pronoun refers to an independent part of speech that is used instead of nouns, adjectives, numerals and adverbs (or their characteristics) to indicate these nouns, adjectives, numerals and adverbs (as well as their characteristics and quantity), without naming them.

The grammatical features of pronouns depend on which part of speech they refer to. This will be discussed in more detail below.

Pronouns are divided into two types of categories: by meaning and by grammatical features.

Digits by value:

  • personal;
  • returnable;
  • possessive;
  • interrogative;
  • relative;
  • index;
  • definitive;
  • negative;
  • undefined.

Sometimes reciprocal and general pronouns are also added to this classification.

Disorders based on grammatical features:

  • generalized subject;
  • generalized-qualitative;
  • generalized quantitative.

This classification examines how pronouns relate to different parts of speech: nouns, adjectives, numerals. In some sources, a special group of pronouns that are correlated with adverbs is sometimes included here.

Now we will analyze all these categories in detail.

Classes of pronouns in Russian

By value:

Personal pronouns. In speech, they indicate its object - the person in question. Pronouns 1 ( I/we) and 2 ( you you) faces indicate participants in speech. 3rd person pronouns ( he, she, it/they) indicate persons who do not participate in the speech.

Obsolete personal pronoun one used to denote feminine (plural) objects of speech.

Personal pronouns in the Russian language change according to persons and numbers, pronouns of the 3rd person singular - also according to gender, as well as to cases.

In a sentence they play the role of subject or object.

  • I couldn't shake the feeling that they could see us. (Ch.T. Aitmatov)
  • Life is always accompanied by effort, hardship and hard work, because it is not a garden with beautiful flowers. (I.A. Goncharov)
  • Why don't I want to be smarter if I understand how stupid everyone around me is? If you wait for everyone to wise up, it will take too long... and then I realized that this is completely impossible. (F.M. Dostoevsky)

Reflexive pronouns. In speech, they indicate the direction of action to the subject. Reflexive pronoun myself does not have a nominative case form, but is declined in all other cases: yourself, yourself, yourself/yourself, (about) yourself. Does not change according to persons, numbers, genders.

In a sentence it acts as a complement.

  • If you happen to be angry with someone else, be angry with yourself at the same time, at least for the fact that you managed to get angry with someone else. (N.V. Gogol)
  • There is nothing more pleasant than being obliged to do everything to yourself. (N.V. Gogol)
  • To live for oneself is not to live, but to exist passively: you need to fight. (I.A. Goncharov)
  • We often allow ourselves to think that ancient people are like inexperienced children. (L.N. Tolstoy)

Possessive pronouns. In speech, they indicate that a certain object (objects) belongs to a subject (or subjects).

Possessive pronouns:

  • 1 person – my, my, my/my And our, ours, ours / ours;
  • 2 persons – yours, yours, yours / yours And yours, yours, yours/yours;
  • 3 persons – him, her/them.

Possessive pronouns in the Russian language change, as you already understood, by person, gender and number, and also in combination with a noun that is being explained - by case. Third person pronouns are not inflected.

  • Our choices, more than our abilities, reveal our true selves. (J.K. Rowling)
  • In our office, out of thirty-two employees on staff, twenty-eight called themselves: “Golden Pen of the Republic.” The three of us, in order of originality, were called silver. (S.D. Dovlatov)
  • There are no such sounds, colors, images and thoughts - complex and simple - for which there would not be an exact expression in our language. (K.G. Paustovsky)

Interrogative pronouns. Pronouns who?, what?, which?, which?, whose?, which?, how many?, where?, when?, where?, from where?, why? serve as interrogative words (indicate persons, objects, signs, quantity) when making interrogative sentences.

They change according to numbers, genders, cases, but not all.

  • Do you know what is given to man, and only to him? Laugh and cry. (E.M. Remarque)
  • Dear, dear, funny fool, / Well, where are you, where are you going? (S. A. Yesenin)
  • What is law? / The law is a tightrope on the street, / To stop passersby in the middle of the road<...>(V.A. Zhukovsky)

Relative pronouns. Pronouns who, what, which, what, whose, which, how many, where, where, when, from, why They also act as allied words in complex sentences and serve to connect the subordinate and main parts of a complex sentence.

Like interrogatives, relative pronouns who what And How many declined according to cases. The rest are based on numbers, genders and cases. Besides pronouns where, where, when, where, why, which are immutable.

In a sentence, depending on the part of speech they replace, they can act in different syntactic roles.

  • There are such low characters who love, as if they hate! (F.M. Dostoevsky)
  • People will always have something to find, discover, invent, because the very source of this knowledge is inexhaustible. (I.A. Goncharov)
  • Outright anger is much less repulsive than pretense of kindness. (L.N. Tolstoy)
  • Joy can be compared to oil in a lamp: when there is not enough oil in the lamp, the wick quickly burns out and the light from the lamp is replaced by black smoke. (L.N. Tolstoy)

Demonstrative pronouns. Indicate the signs or number of objects of speech. The following pronouns fall into this category: so much, this, that, such, such, here, here, here, there, from there, from here, then, therefore, then, obsolete pronouns this one.

Demonstrative pronouns in the Russian language change according to cases, gender and numbers.

  • I've been planning to buy myself a castle for two years. Happy are those who have nothing to lock up. (F.M. Dostoevsky)
  • Sometimes a person reaches such a line that if he doesn’t step over it, he will be unhappy, and if he steps over it, he will become even more unhappy. (F.M. Dostoevsky)
  • The truth should be served like a coat, not thrown in your face like a wet towel. (M. Twain)
  • Anyone who strives for self-improvement will never believe that this self-improvement has a limit. (L.N. Tolstoy)

Determinative pronouns. They are used to indicate a sign of the object of speech. These include: .

Determinative pronouns are declined according to cases and change according to gender and number.

  • Everyone who stops learning grows old, whether at 20 or 80, and anyone else who continues to study remains young. The most important thing in life is to keep your brain young. (G. Ford)
  • One good friend is worth more than all the blessings in this world. (Voltaire)
  • Even the most frank thought, the purest and clearly conveyed fantasy, be it truth or fiction, cannot evoke sincere sympathy. (L.N. Tolstoy)
  • We don't need magic to change this world - within us we already have everything we need for this: we can mentally imagine the best... (J. K. Rowling)

Negative pronouns. In speech they act as an indicator of the absence of the object of speech or its signs. Pronouns no one, nothing, no one, nothing, none, nobody, nowhere and the like, as you can see, are formed from interrogative/relative pronouns by attaching prefixes Not-(under emphasis) and neither-(no emphasis).

In Russian, negative pronouns vary by case, gender and number.

  • The old truth will never be embarrassed by the new - it will put this burden on its shoulders. Only the sick, the obsolete are afraid to take a step forward. (I.A. Goncharov)
  • I believe that nothing passes without a trace and that every little step matters for the present and future life. (A.P. Chekhov)
  • Never make any complex moves when the same can be achieved in much simpler ways. This is one of the wisest rules of life. It is very difficult to apply it in practice. Especially intellectuals and romantics. (E.M. Remarque)
  • Philosophers and children have one noble trait - they do not attach importance to any differences between people - neither social, nor mental, nor external. (A.T. Averchenko)

Indefinite pronouns. Speech expresses indefinite characteristics and the number of objects of speech, as well as their uncertainty.

Pronouns of this category are also formed from interrogative/relative pronouns by adding prefixes to them: not-, some- - something, someone, some, some, several, somehow, something and so on. And also postfixes: - then, -either, - anyone – anyone, somewhere, how much and so on.

Indefinite pronouns in the Russian language change according to gender and number, and are declined according to cases.

  • You can say a lot of stupid things, following only the desire to say something. (Voltaire)
  • Some are accustomed to living on everything ready-made, walking on someone’s feet, eating chewed food... (F.M. Dostoevsky)
  • In hardly anything else is human frivolity more often seen to such a terrifying extent than in the structure of marital unions. (N.S. Leskov)

Mentioned above reciprocal pronouns serve to express attitudes towards two or more persons and objects.

Their number in the Russian language is very large due to the many prepositions, thanks to which for each reciprocal pronoun there is a large number of variable forms. For example, to each other, about each other, in each other, for each other, one from the other, one for the other, one from under the other, after each other, in the end, from end to beginning, from first to second, from case to case case, time after time, from this to that– and this is not a complete list.

In a sentence they play the role of complements.

  • People are pressed together like rats in a cage, their anger at each other is natural for lonely kings. (A.V. Korolev)
  • In bad weather or just when we feel like it, we have fun looking at the contents of tin boxes. We carefully unwrap the wax paper bags and show each other what makes us who we are. (G. Petrovich)

General pronouns serve in speech to indicate objects that are combined according to any characteristics that do not express quality. For example, speech objects combined in pairs ( both; both), or identical ( the same, the same), or an integer set ( everyone, everyone, all) and so on.

Table of categories of pronouns in the Russian language

Rank by value

Examples of pronouns

1. Personal 1st person – me, we
2nd person – you, you
3rd person – he, she, it, they (+ one)
2. Returnable myself
3. Possessives 1st person – mine, mine, mine, mine, our, ours, ours, ours
2nd person – yours, yours, yours, yours, yours, yours, yours, yours
3rd person – his, her, theirs
4. Questions Who? What? Which? what? whose? which? How many? Where? When? Where? where? For what?
5. Relative who, what, which, which, whose, which, how many, where, when, where, why
6. Index fingers so much, this, that, such, such, here, here, here, there, from there, from here, then, therefore, then (+ this, that)
7. Definitive all, every, all, himself, most, every, any, other, different, every, everywhere, everywhere, always
8. Negative no one, nothing, no one, nothing, none, no one's
9. Uncertain someone, something, some, some, several, some, some where, something, somewhere, some, any, some, somewhere, for some reason, someone

“Non-classical” categories are not included in this table intentionally so as not to create confusion.

Correlating pronouns with other parts of speech

In other words, categories based on grammatical features:

Pronouns-nouns indicate a person or thing. They are similar to nouns due to their syntactic and morphological characteristics. For example, in a sentence you can also ask them questions: who? So what? and they act as subject or object. As well as the categories of person (in personal ones, through verbs associated with them), number, gender (expressed in words associated with the pronoun) and case. By the way, the pronoun Who is masculine, and What- average.

Pronouns-nouns in the Russian language include: all personal and reflexive pronouns, some interrogative/relative, negative, indefinite. In particular: he, she, it, they, who, what, nobody, nothing, somebody, something, someone, something etc.

Pronouns-adjectives in speech they indicate the attribute of an object, and this allows them to be correlated with adjectives. In addition, they show inconsistent signs of gender, number and can be declined according to cases. Although, for example, pronouns what And that's how it is They do not decline and in a sentence, unlike others, they can only be predicates. All other adjective pronouns act either as modifiers or as an integral part of the predicate.

Third person possessive pronouns are also unchangeable: his, her, their.

Adjective pronouns include all possessive pronouns and all attributives, some demonstrative and interrogative/relative, negative and indefinite. Namely: my, yours, yours, ours, yours, which, which, whose, that, this, most, every, every and so on.

Numeral pronouns, as you might guess, indicate the number of objects without indicating it exactly. These include pronouns as much as and their indefinite derivatives a few, some, some.

Pronouns of this category are capable of inflection according to cases (everything is the same). But they do not change by gender and number. They agree with nouns according to the same principle as cardinal numbers.

Pronouns-adverbs, already mentioned above, are a special group that is not always identified. Often they are not classified as pronouns at all. Like adjective pronouns, they indicate a characteristic, but are unchangeable and characterize an action. And this allows us to correlate them with adverbs.

Pronouns of this category do not show signs of gender and number, and are not declined according to cases. They agree with verbs according to the same principle as adverbs. And circumstances play a role in a sentence.

Pronoun-adverbs include: there, where, where, when, so.

Pronouns in Russian - table of categories in relation to parts of speech

Grammar classification

Examples of pronouns

1. Pronouns - nouns he, she, it, they, who, what, no one, nothing, someone, something, someone, something and others
2. Adjective pronouns my, yours, yours, ours, yours, which, which, whose, that, this, most, every, each and others
3. Numeral pronouns as much as, several, how much, how much
4. Pronouns-adverbs there, where, where, when, so

Cases of pronouns in Russian

Pronouns of different categories have their own peculiarities of changing according to cases. Now we will look at some of them in more detail.

1. Cases of personal pronouns

In indirect cases, not only the endings of these pronouns change, but also the stem:

I.p. I, you, we, you, he, it, she, they

R.p. me, you, us, you, his, his, her, their

D.p. me, you, us, you, his, his, her, their

V.p. me, you, us, you, his, his, her, their

etc. me (me), you (you), us, you, them, them, her (her), them

P.p. (about) me, (about) you, (about) us, (about) you, (about) him, (about) him, (about) her, (about) them.

The 1st and 2nd person singular pronouns do not have clearly defined gender categories: they are used in both masculine, feminine, and neuter.

Third person pronouns, when inflected, may lose their initial consonant: she- But her and so on.

2. For a reflexive pronoun myself There are only forms of oblique cases. It is also declined as a personal pronoun You:

etc. by myself (by myself)

P.p. (About Me

  • possessive pronouns ( my, yours, ours, yours);
  • index ( that, this, this);
  • interrogative/relative ( which, which, whose);
  • determinatives ( most, himself, all, every, different).

I.p. our, ours, ours, ours; such, such, such, such

R.p. ours, ours, ours, ours; such, such, such, such

D.p. ours, ours, ours, ours; like this, like this, like this, like this

V.p. ours, ours, ours, ours; such, such, such, such

etc. ours, ours, ours, ours; like this, like this, like this

P.p. (about) ours, (about) ours, (about) ours, (about) ours; (about) such, (about) such, (about) such, (about) such

Determinative pronouns myself And most, although similar, incline differently. The difference is indicated mainly by emphasis:

I.p. the most, the most

R.p. the most, the most

D.p. myself, myself

V.p. the most, the most

etc. by myself, by myself

P.p. (about) myself, (about) myself

* A capital letter indicates a stressed syllable.

Pay attention to the declension of attributive pronouns all, all, everything:

I.p. all, all, everything

R.p. everything, all, everyone

D.p. everything, everything, everyone

V.p. everything, all, everyone

etc. everyone, all (all), everyone

P.p. (about) everything, (about) everything, (about) everyone

When declension of feminine and neuter pronouns, only the endings change, but in the masculine gender the stem also changes.

4. In interrogative/relative ( who what) and the negative ones formed from them ( nobody, nothing) of pronouns, when changing by case, the bases change:

I.p. who, what, nobody, nothing

R.p. who, what, no one, nothing

D.p. to whom, what, no one, nothing

V.p. who, what, no one, nothing

etc. who, what, nothing, nothing

P.p. (about) whom, (about) what, about no one, about nothing.

At the same time, in the prepositional case, the preposition breaks negative pronouns into three words.

5. Like the reflexive pronoun, some negative pronouns do not have a nominative case form:

R.p. no one

D.p. no one

V.p. no one

etc. no one

P.p. not about anyone.

6. Indefinite pronouns are declined in the same way as the interrogative/relative pronouns from which they are formed:

I.p. any, something

R.p. any, something

D.p. to any, something

V.p. any, something

etc. somehow, something

P.p. (about) any, about something

7. There are variable case forms for the indefinite pronoun some:

I.p. some

R.p. some

D.p. to a certain

V.p. no one

etc. some (some)

P.p. (about) someone

Variant case forms exist for this pronoun in other gender/number as well.

8. Some index fingers ( that's how it is), relative ( what), undefined ( someone, something) pronouns do not change by case. Pronouns and adverbs are not declined either there, where, where, when, so.

Morphological analysis of pronouns

We offer you a diagram of morphological analysis of pronouns and an example of such analysis.

Parsing scheme:

  1. Indicate the part of speech, the grammatical meaning of the pronoun, write the initial form (put it in the nominative case (if any), singular).
  2. Describe the morphological features:
    • constants (category by meaning, rank by grammatical features, person (for personal and possessive), number (for personal 1st and 2nd persons);
    • inconsistent (case, number, gender).
  3. Indicate what role it plays in the sentence.

Sample morphological analysis of pronouns

Don't waste your energy trying to change people... They will not change. U them Who decided to take a strong action, That and rights (F.M. Dostoevsky).

  1. Morphological features: constants - personal, pronoun-noun, 3rd person; inconstant – nominative case, plural.

(at) them

  1. Pronoun; indicates the object of speech without directly naming it, n.f. - They.
  2. Morphological features: constants - personal, pronoun-noun, 3rd person; inconstant – genitive case, plural.
  3. Role in a sentence: addition.
  1. Pronoun; indicates the object of speech without naming it, n.f. - Who.
  2. Morphological features: constants – relative, pronoun-noun; inconstant – nominative case.
  3. It plays the role of subject in a sentence.
  1. Pronoun; indicates the object of speech without naming it, n.f. - That.
  2. Morphological features: constants – demonstrative, pronoun-adjective; inconstant – nominative case, singular, masculine.
  3. Role in a sentence: subject.

Spelling pronouns

Personal pronouns

When declension of personal pronouns in Russian in indirect cases, the letter appears at the base of 3rd person pronouns n, if they have a pretext in front of them. For example, about him, to them, about her, among them and so on.

N does not join:

  • in the dative case, if the pronoun is preceded by a derivative preposition thanks, like, contrary, according to, towards, in spite of: contrary to to her, towards them, according to to him;
  • if the pronoun is used in a phrase where it is preceded by an adjective or adverb in the comparative degree: took more his, bought cheaper their.

Indefinite pronouns

Indefinite pronouns are always written with a hyphen and a prefix some and postfixes -something, -either, -something: someone, somehow, something, somewhere and so on.

When declension of indefinite pronouns in the prepositional case between the prefix some and the pronoun places a preposition. In this case, they are written in three words: about something, about something, about something and so on.

Negative pronouns

Negative pronouns are formed from interrogative/relative pronouns using prefixes not-/nor-. Not- written under stress, in an unstressed syllable - neither-: no one to trust - no one to see, no place to leave - nowhere to be found; no one, nothing, not at all, none, no one.

When declension of negative pronouns in Russian, prepositions can be used in the forms of indirect cases. They break the word into three, which are written separately, and the prefixes become particles: no - not from anyone, nothing - from nothing, no one - not about anyone and so on.

note

1. It is necessary to distinguish between the spelling of prefixes not-/nor- and homonymous particles not/nor:

  • Remember the spelling: How neither what Not it happened. Confusion in the spelling of particles not/nor leads not only to spelling errors, but also to a distortion of the meaning of the statement. Compare: not with anything(particle neither has an intensifying meaning) – nothing(particle Not has a negative value).
  • The choice of particle can completely change the meaning of a statement to the opposite: not one (= no one at all) – not one (= many), not once (= never at all) – more than once (= many times).
  • Don't confuse negative pronouns with prefixes neither- (nowhere, no one, no one) and pronouns with a particle neither (no one, no where, no one). Compare: Neither where not a trace of a person was found. - I have no idea neither who are you, neither where do you live, neither who do you serve.
  • Pay attention to the difference between phrases none other than - no one else; nothing more than nothing else. Particle Not expresses negation, and the entire phrase is used to contrast parts of the statement with each other. Opposition is expressed by conjunction How(= union A). If the sentence is affirmative and if it is impossible to add a second negation without violating the meaning, use the particle Not and write it separately. For example: Everything that happened was Not nothing more than a stupid prank. He stood uncertainly on the threshold Not who else but the long-awaited guest.
  • If a pronoun with a particle can be meaningfully replaced by particles exactly, just, then the particle is used Not and the phrase is written separately: none other than; nothing more than. Example: A registered letter arrived - nothing more than invitation to a competition that has been awaited for a long time. - A registered letter has arrived - just that invitation to the competition that has been awaited for a long time.
  • If the sentence is negative, i.e. the predicate has its own negative particle Not, That neither- acts as a prefix and is written combined with a negative pronoun: Neither no one else could have said it better. This is donkey stubbornness neither there was no other way to win.
  • If the sentence is affirmative, phrases no one else, nothing else are used for joining. A negation not expressed in a sentence exists potentially and can be restored from the context: I only want this and neither anything else (I don’t want).
  • If the phrase contains a conjunction How, write all words separately and with a particle Not: This package Not nothing more than a gift. If the union How no, write a prefix neither-: Neither who else does not understand me so well.
  • If a conjunction is used in a sentence A, write the particle Not(apart): I want to say everything Not to someone A only for him alone. If a conjunction is used And, write neither(separately if it is a particle, together if it is a prefix): Much has gone forever and neither that it won't be the same anymore.

2.Do not confuse homonyms: pronoun + preposition and conjunctions/adverbs. Pay attention to how they agree with other members of the sentence, what syntactic role they themselves play, what question can be asked of them, etc.

  • For what We're going to the store, what are we going to look for there? – For what do you follow me and whine all the time?
  • For that that you helped me, I will thank you. – But I have a wide soul and a kind heart!
  • What does it have to do with are all these people here? – They trained a lot and prepared for the competition, and some even abandoned their studies.
  • Moreover What we were able to unearth from the ancient tomb was a sword and shield. – Moreover, if you think sensibly, he has power on his side.

3.Remember that never mind– this is not a pronoun, but an adverb.

Of course, this is a very extensive material and it is difficult to master it in one go. Therefore, we suggest that you bookmark this article in your browser so that it is always at hand at the right time. Contact her whenever you need any information about pronouns.

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The use of the pronouns my, our, yours, yours, his, her, theirs in relation to the use of personal pronouns of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd person. Thus, the 2nd person pronouns in the above examples are a sign of addressed speech: “Your huge world” (title - Moscow Koms. 1989. March 18); “A book about your friend” (title - Koms. pr. 1991. October 30); “On your terms, the Moscow center will rent for any period or buy an apartment in Moscow” (Moscow Koms. April 1991, 17). In sentences like: “Instructions describe our life from birth to death. But this does not make life easier, but on the contrary, it becomes more restless and more difficult” (AiF. 1989. No. 3); “And in general, our football is getting closer and closer to the “Danish version”: relatively weak clubs, but a strong team made up of players playing abroad” (Koms. pr. 1991. November 5) - possessive pronouns appear in a generalizing-restrictive meaning. Under the heading “Their” voices were conveyed,” Moskovsky Komsomolets publishes excerpts from messages from foreign radio stations, many of which were previously odious in our country. The quotation marks in which the pronoun is enclosed are an ironic reaction to previously common headings and headings (such as “Their Morals”, “Under the Shadow of Their Freedoms”). “Ours” is a tendentious title for a series of programs by A. Nevzorov about the actions of riot police in the Baltics in January-March 1991. A title reflecting the political leanings of the journalist. One of the new Moscow newspapers, which is equally biased in the selection and interpretation of facts, received the same name - “Ours”.

The pronoun one indicates belonging to any of the three persons; "I love my job"; "You love your job"; "He loves his job". It should be emphasized that there are several features in its use.

1. If the active producer of the action is the 1st or 2nd person, the pronoun my is synonymous with the possessive pronouns my, yours, yours, ours: “I don’t write my biography. I turn to it when someone else’s demands it” (Past.) - 1st person; “Be silent, hide and hide your feelings and dreams” (Tutch.) - 2nd person.

The difference between them is that the pronoun “your” simply indicates belonging, and the possessive pronouns of the 1st and 2nd persons emphasize which particular person we are talking about. Depending on the purpose of the message, the speaker chooses one or another pronoun. Thus, in the novel “Eugene Onegin” by A.S. Pushkin, speaking about the main and beloved characters of the novel, about the novel itself, prefers the pronoun mine: “Forgive me! I love my dear Tatyana so much”; “But that’s enough. It’s time for me to start writing my beauty’s letter”; “With the hero of my novel Without preamble, this very hour, Let me introduce you”; "And with that I began my novel."

In general, in lyrical poetry it is very common to use possessive pronouns of the 1st and 2nd persons, which are more meaningful than the pronoun your: “With a sheaf of your oat hair, you have appeared to me forever” (Es.); “And reading my life with disgust, I tremble and curse” (P.); “I am learning, I am learning with my heart to cherish the color of bird cherry trees in my eyes” (Es.).

2. The pronoun one can be used only when the person, the object to which the pronoun indicates belonging, is an active producer of the action and takes the place of the subject in the sentence: “You returned to your city, familiar to tears” (Mand.); “And I will know wisdom and sadness, objects will entrust their secret meaning to me” (B.Akhm.).

In other cases, the use of the pronoun "s" is erroneous: it creates ambiguity. Therefore, the following newspaper examples are unsuccessful: “Angrily condemning his unworthy behavior, the workers helped him understand his mistakes” (Volg. Ave.); “We found the chairman of the collective farm in his office” (ibid.). It is unclear whose delusions and whose office we are talking about. It was necessary to say: “in his delusions,” “in his study.”

3. You should not use the pronoun yours even when in the context there are already indications of ownership expressed by other means, which makes the use of the pronoun yours unnecessary, for example; “More than once... the turner Comrade Khodin demonstrated advanced work techniques, fulfilling his quota 180 percent” (Kolomenskaya Pravda).

Rakhmanova L.I., Suzdaltseva V.N. Modern Russian language. - M, 1997.

According to their meaning and grammatical characteristics, pronouns in the Russian language have categories: personal, reflexive, possessive, interrogative, relative, negative, indefinite, attributive and demonstrative.

Table “Dispositions of pronouns”

Place is a constant grammatical feature of pronouns.

To correctly determine the category of pronouns, we will find out what meanings they have in speech and highlight their main grammatical features.

Discharge
ExamplesSyntax function
Personal I, you, we, you, he, she, it, they I went to the window.
My phone rang.
Returnable myself Look at yourself in the mirror.
Cats are capable of living on their own.
Possessivesmy, yours, ours, yours, yours I know your opinion.
His face became sad.
Interrogative Who? What? Which? what?
which one? whose? how much?
Who's knocking on the door?
At whose window are the pigeons sitting?
How many apples are on the table?
Relative who, what, which, which, which, whose, how many I can’t understand what could have delayed them so much.
This is the house within whose walls I spent my childhood.
Negative no one, nothing, no one,
nothing, nothing,
nobody's, not at all
Nobody answered me.
There is no one to ask about this now.
There is no mistake here.
Undefined someone, something, some,
someone, how many,
anything, someone,
some, any,
some, someone's, somebody's
Someone was singing a song.
Someone's voice was heard in the yard.
Mark the seedling with something.
Definitive himself, most, everyone,
any, everyone, whole,
different, all, different
Another path lies ahead of us.
Tomorrow everything will seem different.
Index fingers this, that, such,
such and such, such and such,
so much, so much
There is a cafe behind that house.
There was so much joy in her eyes!
The essence of the issue is that it is better to solve it together.

In the table we got acquainted with the categories of pronouns with examples of their use in the Russian language. We previously learned.

Personal pronouns “I”, “we”, “you”, “you”, “he”, “she”, “it”, “they” point to a person or object.

Pronouns "I", "we" refer to the first person; "you you"- to the second; "he she it"- to the third.

I climbed a tall pine tree and began to scream (K. Paustovsky).

We followed the elk trail (K. Paustovsky).

Do you remember, Alyosha, the roads of the Smolensk region? (K. Simonov)

Have you seen how a saffron milk cap walks under a pine roof in morocco boots? (A. Kovalenko)

At pronouns "he she it" determined by masculine, feminine and neuter gender.

He sang, and from every sound of his voice you smelled something familiar and vastly wide, as if the familiar steppe was opening up before you, going into an endless distance (I.S. Turgenev).

After Masha rummaged through her works, she settled on novels (A. Pushkin).

To the left, from the edge of the village, a field began; it was visible far to the horizon, and throughout the entire width of this field, flooded with moonlight, there was also neither movement nor sound (A. Chekhov).

Personal pronouns have a singular and plural category.

Let's compare:

  • I, you - we, you;
  • he, she, it - they.

However, we mean that pronouns "I" And "We" , "you and "You" are not singular and plural forms of the same word. Pronouns "We" And "You" do not indicate "I'm a lot" or "you are a lot". They indicate the speaker or interlocutor along with other persons participating in a conversation or in a particular action.

All personal pronouns change by case. When they are declined in oblique cases, completely different words appear:

  • I - me;
  • you - you;
  • she her;
  • they are theirs.

As soon as I touch mathematics, I will again forget everything in the world (S. Kovalevskaya).

Reflexive pronoun "myself" indicates the person being spoken about.

Will you look into yourself? There is no trace of the past there (M. Lermontov).

I erected a monument to myself, not made by hands (A. Pushkin).

This pronoun does not have a nominative case form, grammatical categories of person, gender, or number. It changes only by case:

  • i.p. -
  • r.p. myself
  • d.p. to myself
  • v.p. myself
  • etc. yourself
  • p.p. About Me

horse (im.p.) (whose?) his (r.p.).

The nightingale happened to fly to their noise (I.A. Krylov).

The noise (whose?) of them- inconsistent definition.

Possessive pronouns "his", "her", "their" do not change.

Words that nouns answer ( Who? What?), adjectives ( Which? whose? what? which one?) and numerals ( how much?) are interrogative pronouns.

Who's knocking at the gate? (S. Marshak).

What will I do for people? - Danko (M. Gorky) shouted louder than thunder.

Suddenly he turned to his mother: “Avdotya Vasilievna, how old is Petrusha?” (A. Pushkin).

“What don’t you understand?” - Pavel Vasilyevich asks Styopa (A. Chekhov).

What news did you receive yesterday?

What is the answer to my question?

Which math lesson will it be?

The same pronouns, only without a question, serve to connect simple sentences as part of a complex sentence and are called relative:

Look how many flat-bottomed scows lie on my shore (A. Kataev).

A hundred paces from me there was a dark grove, from which I just left (A. Chekhov).

He was not at all what Konstantin (L. Tolstoy) imagined him to be.

It was already getting dark, and Vasily could not understand who was coming (K. Paustovsky).

I often wanted to guess what he was writing about (A. Pushkin).

I also thought about the person in whose hands my fate was (A. Pushkin).

Indefinite pronouns

Indicate unknown objects, signs and quantities:

“someone”, “something”, “some”, “several”, “someone”, “something”, “someone”, “anyone”, “anyone”, “someone” ”, “some”, “any”, “any”, “someone’s”, “someone’s”, “someone’s”, “how much”, “as much”.

Someone was playing the violin...the girl sang in a soft contralto voice, and laughter could be heard (M. Gorky).

It became scary, as if in this silence some danger was silently lurking for him (V. Kataev).

In the living room, something small fell from the table and broke (A. Chekhov).

You are unable to act from any motives (K. Fedin).

But, perhaps, he was right about something (M. Sholokhov).

Negative pronouns

Negative pronouns “nobody”, “nothing”, “no one”, “nothing”, “none”, “nobody”, “not at all” serve to deny the presence of some object, attribute or quantity or to strengthen the negative meaning of the entire sentence.

I don’t want to sadden you with anything (A. Pushkin).

Nobody really knew anything (K. Simonov).

Vladik stood silently, not bullying anyone and not answering anyone’s questions (A. Gaidar).

They are formed from interrogative (relative) pronouns using an unstressed prefix neither- or shock attachment Not-.

Pronouns “no one”, “nothing” do not have a nominative case.

They were silent because there was nothing to tell each other (I.A. Goncharov).

There is no one to ask when it is your own fault (proverb).

Pronouns “nobody”, “no one”, “nobody”, “no one”, “nothing” can be used with a preposition that comes after the prefix:

not from anyone, on anything, under no one, behind anyone, not from anyone, not because of anything, etc.

In nothing does the national character manifest itself so freely as in song and dance (A. Fadeev).

I don’t want to think about anything, interfere in anything (M. Prishvin).

An attempt to intercept Masha on the road did not lead to anything (A. Fadeev).

“that”, “this”, “such”, “such”, “so much” serve to highlight a certain object, feature, or quantity among others.

I would strictly forbid these gentlemen to approach the capitals for a shot! (A. Griboyedov).

All this would be funny if it weren’t so sad (M. Lermontov).

There are as many heads as there are minds (proverb).

In the dark, I climbed into such a windfall, from which it would be difficult to get out even during the day. However, I managed to get out of this labyrinth (V. Arsenyev).

Determinative pronouns - “all”, “everyone”, “himself”, “most”, “everyone”, “any”, “different”, “different”, “whole”.

Everyone who is young, give us your hands - join our ranks, friends! (L. Oshanin).

Every work of a master is praised (proverb).

Learn to control yourself; Not everyone will understand you like I do; inexperience leads to trouble (A. Pushkin).

To the right the entire village was visible, the long street stretched about five miles away (A. Chekhov).

These pronouns change in gender, number and case, like adjectives.

Video lesson on the Russian language for 6th grade students “Pronoun. Pronoun grades"



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