demostrative pronouns , indefinity pronouns or distributive pronouns some example with example
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Answer:
An indefinite pronoun does not refer to any specific person, thing or amount. It is vague and "not definite". Some typical indefinite pronouns are: all, another, any, anybody/anyone, anything, each, everybody/everyone, everything, few, many, nobody, none, one, several, some, somebody/someone.
A distributive pronoun considers members of a group separately, rather than collectively. They include either, neither and others. "to each his own" — 'each2,(pronoun)' Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary (2007) "Men take each other's measure when they react."
Pronouns that point to specific things: this, that, these, and those, as in “This is an apple,” “Those are boys,” or “Take these to the clerk.” The same words are used as demonstrative adjectives when they modify nouns or pronouns: “this apple,” “those boys.”
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