-
81 pronoun
n.олмештыш мут л.м.[olmeshtysh mut] -
82 pronoun
n.есімдік -
83 pronoun
zamir, adil -
84 pronoun
kb. kataganti. -
85 pronoun
zamir -
86 pronoun
nounസര്വ്വനാമം പോലെ പ്രവര്ത്തിക്കുന്ന -
87 Pronoun
pronomo. -
88 pronoun
n.zaimennik · заименник m., městoimę · местоиме n., zaimę · заиме n. -
89 pronoun of address
Лингвистика: местоимение в функции обращения -
90 pronoun pro·noun n
['prəʊˌnaʊn]pronome m -
91 pronoun resolution
anafora -
92 personal pronoun
-
93 reciprocal pronoun
грам. взаимное местоимение -
94 personal pronoun
(a pronoun which refers to the first, second or third persons: I am going; He hit her; She saw you.) personligt pronomen* * *(a pronoun which refers to the first, second or third persons: I am going; He hit her; She saw you.) personligt pronomen -
95 personal pronoun
(a pronoun which refers to the first, second or third persons: I am going; He hit her; She saw you.)pronombre nombre masculino personal -
96 conjunctive pronoun
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > conjunctive pronoun
-
97 address with the pronoun vos
-
98 reflexive pronoun or verb
-
99 personal pronoun
(a pronoun which refers to the first, second or third persons: I am going; He hit her; She saw you.) persónufornafn -
100 personal pronoun
(a pronoun which refers to the first, second or third persons: I am going; He hit her; She saw you.)
См. также в других словарях:
Pronoun — Pro noun, n. [Pref. pro + noun: cf. F. pronom, L. pronomen. See {Noun}.] (Gram.) A word used instead of a noun or name, to avoid the repetition of it. The personal pronouns in English are I, thou or you, he, she, it, we, ye, and they. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pronoun — 1520s, from PRO (Cf. pro ) and NOUN (Cf. noun); modeled on M.Fr. pronom, from L. pronomen, from pro in place of + nomen name, noun. A loan translation of Gk. antonymia. Adj. pronomial is recorded from 1640s … Etymology dictionary
pronoun — ► NOUN ▪ a word used instead of a noun to indicate someone or something already mentioned or known, e.g. I, she, this … English terms dictionary
pronoun — [prō′noun΄] n. [altered (infl. by NOUN) < MFr pronom < L pronomen < pro, for + nomen, NOUN] Gram. any of a small class of relationship or signal words that assume the functions of nouns within clauses or phrases while referring to other… … English World dictionary
Pronoun — ExamplesSidebar|35% * I love you. * She turned and stared at them. * That reminds me of something. * Who says so? * Take it or leave it (Impersonal pronoun).In linguistics and grammar, a pronoun is a pro form that substitutes for a (including a… … Wikipedia
pronoun — pro|noun [ˈprəunaun US ˈprou ] n [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: pro + noun, on the model of Latin pronomen pronoun , from nomen name ] a word that is used instead of a noun or noun phrase, such as he instead of Peter or the man →↑demonstrative pronoun … Dictionary of contemporary English
pronoun — [[t]pro͟ʊnaʊn[/t]] pronouns N COUNT A pronoun is a word that you use to refer to someone or something when you do not need to use a noun, often because the person or thing has been mentioned earlier. Examples are it , she , something , and myself … English dictionary
pronoun — n. a demonstrative; indefinite; interrogative; personal; possessive; reflexive; relative pronoun * * * indefinite interrogative personal possessive reflexive relative pronoun a demonstrative … Combinatory dictionary
pronoun — noun (C) a word that is used instead of a noun or noun phrase, such as he instead of Peter or instead of the man see also: demonstrative pronoun, personal pronoun … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
pronoun */ — UK [ˈprəʊnaʊn] / US [ˈproʊˌnaʊn] noun [countable] Word forms pronoun : singular pronoun plural pronouns linguistics a word used instead of a noun for referring to a person or thing that has been mentioned earlier, for example she , they , that ,… … English dictionary
pronoun — word used in place of a noun or nouns. In I like walking and reading; such are my pleasures, such is a pronoun standing for reading and walking. Pronouns have been variously grouped by different authorities. Among the more common groupings are… … Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors