English, asked by heroesbydestiny, 5 months ago

what is demonstrative adjectives and demonstrative pronouns, where they are used??​

Answers

Answered by Deepthika6aSgips
1

Answer:

A demonstrative pronoun is a pronoun used to point something out. The demonstrative pronouns are this, that, these and those.

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Demonstrative adjectives

This house is my grandmother's.

That car belongs to Joe.

I'll take these sandals.

Those chameleons look a little off-colour; are they well?

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Answered by nandinisharmastudent
1

Answer:

Demonstrative pronouns and adjectives in English are the same words, this, these, that, those. What makes them an adjective or a pronoun is how they are used. Demonstrative adjectives qualify a noun whereas demonstrative pronouns do not. If I say “take this lemon", I am using this as a demonstrative adjective because it qualifies the noun lemon.

We use demonstrative adjectives to specify what we are referring to, to indicate whether the person or thing is singular or plural, and to give the listener information about that person or object’s proximity to the speaker (identifying whether it’s nearby or far away).

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