When to Use an Indefinite Pronoun?
Indefinite pronouns are commonly used to describe individuals or objects beyond specifying who or who they represent. For individuals, we employ pronouns concluding in body or one, whereas, for objects, we employ pronouns concluding in thing.
- We employ pronouns with ‘no’ in negated sentences, not pronouns with ‘any.’
- If a sentence containing nobody, no one, or nothing, we do not employ further false.
- We may form a possessive pronoun by adding ‘s’ to an indefinite pronoun.
Indefinite Pronoun
Any indeterminate pronoun is a term that lacks a particular familiar recipient. Indefinite pronouns vary from definite pronouns. Indefinite pronouns have the ability to indicate either count as well as non-count nouns. They frequently have associated forms across all these categories. An indefinite pronoun is one that identifies an individual or subject without specifying who or what it refers to. All, anyone, anything, any, everyone, anybody, everything, several, many, none, nothing, several, and some, are the most common.