Italian-Pronoun

All you need to know about Italian Pronoun Disjunctive Pronoun, Object Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, Subject Pronouns

Subject Pronouns

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Pronouns are basically words that represent the noun that it stands for. In English, we may use a variety of sentences using the character ‘Peter’. But to refer him in the later sentences we would use a pronoun ‘he’ in place of ‘Peter’. It does change accordingly to feminine and plurals. We have pronouns such as ‘she’ to represent a feminine noun and ‘we’ and ‘they’ to refer to the plural nouns.

Relative Pronouns

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Relative pronouns are those pronouns that connect a dependent clause with a main clause in one sentence. The noun or the pronoun that is referred to is called the antecedent. In English relative pronouns are basically that, what, whom, which, whose. In Italian however the relative pronouns are a little different. They are:

Object Pronouns

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Words which replace nouns are termed as pronouns.

Disjunctive Pronouns

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Pronouns that are used independently, that mean they are used apart from the verb are called disjunctive pronouns. They are pronouns which lay emphasis or may follow prepositions. They are found in a statement or an exclamation.