pronoun

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

pro- + noun, modeled on Middle French pronom, from Latin pronomen, itself a calque of Ancient Greek ᾰ̓ντωνῠμῐ́ᾱ (antōnumíā).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈpɹəʊnaʊn/
  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈpɹoʊ.naʊn/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -əʊnaʊn, -oʊnaʊn

Noun

Examples (English grammar)
  • I, you, him, who, me, my, each other

pronoun (plural pronouns)

  1. (grammar) A type of word that refers anaphorically to a noun or noun phrase, but which cannot ordinarily be preceded by a determiner and rarely takes an attributive adjective.
    • 1789, Jean Baptiste, A grammar of the French tongue, page 193:
      The possessive conjunctive pronoun is always repeated before a substantive, and after a conjunction; as my brothers and sisters, mes frères & mes sœurs; []
    • 1997, Kevin Smith, Chasing Amy:
      Dalia: Why are you playing the pronoun game?
      Alyssa: What? What are you talking about? I'm not even.
      Dalia: You are. "I met someone." "We have a great time. "They're from my home town." Doesn't this tube of wonderful have a name!
    • 2013, Nicholas Brownless, “Spoken Discourse in Early English Newspapers”, in Joad Raymond, editor, News Networks in Seventeenth Century Britain and Europe, page 72:
      As here the possessive pronoun 'our' has inclusive reference in that it a priori includes both the editor and reader, its presence amounts to a kind of pronominal bonding between writer and reader.
  2. (chiefly in the plural) Any of the pronouns by which a person prefers to be described, typically reflecting gender identity.
    My pronouns are she/her.
    • 2019, Genny Beemyn, editor, Trans People in Higher Education, SUNY Press, →ISBN, page 178:
      The vast majority (82 percent) of the nonbinary trans students I interviewed used nonbinary pronouns for themselves, and all said that they were rarely given the opportunity to indicate their pronouns.

Hypernyms

Derived terms

Translations

See also

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