Word Hierarchy for โ€œpronounโ€

(noun) (grammar) A type of noun that refers anaphorically to another noun or noun phrase, but which cannot ordinarily be preceded by a determiner and rarely takes an attributive adjective. English examples include I, you, him, who, me, my, each other.

โ€œPronounโ€ is a kind ofโ€ฆ

Broader categories (hypernyms)

2 categories
Types of โ€œPronounโ€

More specific words (hyponyms)

5 types

Understanding Word Hierarchy

  • โ†‘ Hypernyms (blue) are broader categories โ€” โ€œpronounโ€ is a type of these.
  • โ†“ Hyponyms (purple) are more specific โ€” these are types of โ€œpronounโ€.
  • โ†’ Click any word to explore its own hierarchy and navigate the vocabulary tree.
  • โ†’ Use in writing โ€” swap a vague word for a precise hyponym to make your writing more specific.

Frequently Asked Questions

What category does "pronoun" belong to?

"Pronoun" is a kind of function word, closed-class word. These are its hypernyms โ€” broader categories that "pronoun" falls under according to WordNet.

What are more specific types of "pronoun"?

More specific types of "pronoun" (hyponyms) include: demonstrative, personal pronoun, relative pronoun, demonstrative pronoun, anaphoric pronoun. These are all subtypes that fall under the category of "pronoun".

What is a hypernym?

A hypernym is a word whose meaning includes the meaning of a more specific word. For example, "vehicle" is a hypernym of "car" โ€” every car is a vehicle, but not every vehicle is a car.

What is a hyponym?

A hyponym is a word that is more specific than a general term. For example, "oak" and "pine" are hyponyms of "tree". Understanding hyponyms helps you choose more precise language in writing.