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Article, personal, The “near” demonstrative this (singular) or these…
Article
interrogative
What and which, used to ask questions about things
Who and whom, used to ask about people
Whose, used to ask about ownership
relative
Which(ever), that, and what(ever), used in relation to things
Who(ever) and whom(ever), used in relation to people
Whose, used to indicate ownership
reflexive
Reflexive pronouns are words like myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves and themselves. They refer back to a person or thing.
Possessive
A possessive pronoun is a pronoun used to indicate indicate ownership (e.g., “This hat is mine”). The English possessive pronouns are mine, ours, yours, his, hers, theirs, and whose.
indefinite
The main group of indefinite pronouns is formed by various combinations of no-, any-, some-, and every- with -thing, -one, and -body (e.g., “anything”).
demonstrative
personal
Person (first-, second-, or third-person)
Number (singular or plural)
Gender (masculine, feminine, neuter, or epicene)
Case (subject, object, possessive, or reflexive/intensive)
The “near” demonstrative this (singular) or these (plural) indicates something close to you.
The “far” demonstrative that (singular) or those (plural) indicates something farther from you.