Soft Schools
Soft Schools: Relative Pronouns
Learn about relative pronouns, then take a short quiz to check mastery.
TES Global
Blendspace: Grammar Pre Learner Week 3 Relative Pronouns
In this TES Blendspace, students will have access to six multimedia resources that will help them learn about relative pronouns.
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Pronouns
This page focuses on pronouns including definitions, personal pronouns, antecedents, relative pronouns, who vs. whom, demonstrative, indefinite, reflexive and intensive, possessive, and interrogative pronouns. Examples are provided for...
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Pronoun Case
An explanation with examples of subjective, objective, and possessive case pronouns.
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Possessive Pronouns: Rules and Examples
An explanation with examples of possessive pronouns and how they are used in sentences.
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Pronoun Reference
An explanation with examples of pronouns and how they are used in sentences.
University College London
University College London: Pronoun or Determiner?
Five sentence exercises for determining whether a bold word is used as a determiner or a pronoun. Answers are explained and followed up by link to more information. You may want to cursor up for a tutorial before the quiz. Browser must...
Sophia Learning
Sophia: Pronouns
Ten slides introducing pronouns, antecedents, and how they are used in first, second, and third person narration. Examples are provided through sentences and pronoun charts.
Robin L. Simmons
Grammar Bytes: Pronoun Reference
Printable information is provided that demonstrates how to recognize pronoun reference in the context of a sentence.
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Intensive Pronouns
An explanation with examples of intensive pronouns and how they are used in sentences, as well as how they differ from reflexive pronouns.
Capital Community College Foundation
Guide to Grammar and Writing: Consistency of Tense and Pronoun
Brief instruction on maintaining pronoun and verb tense consistency. Links to additional help and quiz are included.
Towson University
Towson University: Online Writing Support: Usage Pronoun Antecedent Agreement
This entry provides the nine rules for pronoun-antecedent agreement and examples for each.
Towson University
Towson University: Online Writing Support: Self Teaching Unit: Pronoun Case
This lesson focuses on pronoun case including subjective, objective, and possessive case. It provides examples of each and also discusses personal pronouns, reflexive / intensive pronouns, and the use of Who and Whom. It offers links to...
Towson University
Towson University: Ows: Pronoun Antecedent Agreement Exercise 3
This is a 10-question, self-grading exercise/quiz on Pronoun - Antecedent Agreement.
Towson University
Towson University: Ows: Faulty Pronoun Reference Exercise 1
This is a 10-question, self-grading exercise/quiz on correcting Faulty Pronoun References.
Grammarly
Grammarly Handbook: Reciprocal Pronouns
An explanation with examples of reciprocal pronouns and how they are used in sentences.
Get It Write
Get It Write: Reflexive Pronouns
In this tutorial leson, students will find a list of reflexive pronouns, examples of them in context, and explanations of when to use them. A short quiz is provided at the end of the lesson.
Wisc-Online
Wisc Online: Noun/pronoun Agreement: Exercise 1
Students select the correct pronoun to match the given noun in a 20-question exercise.
Other
Grammar Monster: What Are Possessive Pronouns?
Get a better understanding of possessive pronouns with definitions, examples, lists, antecedents, and a five-question quiz.
Goodwill
Gcf Global: I, Me, and Other Pronouns
Learn the proper use of I, me, and other pronouns. Includes a chart that tells you which pronouns can replace subjects and which can replace objects.
Capital Community College Foundation
Guide to Grammar and Writing: Pronoun Choice Quiz
Ten choose-the-correct-pronoun sentences. Click Submit button to see right and wrong answers.
Get It Write
Get It Write: Singular Indefinite Personal Pronouns: Part I
A brief tutorial on the use of indefinite personal prounouns. Included is a list of third-person singular pronouns and a short quiz.
Grammarly
Grammarly Blog: Who and Whom
This page focuses on correctly using who or whom. Since who is a subjective pronoun, you can try replacing it with another subjective pronoun such as he or she to see how it sounds. Whom is an objective pronoun and can be replaced with...
Other
Tidewater Community College: Writing Center: Pronoun Agreement
This site has information on guidelines for proper pronoun usage. Topics covered include agreement in person, number, and gender.