The compound relative pronouns are:—
Whoever or whosoever, whichever or whichsoever, whatever or whatsoever.
The interrogative pronouns are:—
Who, which, and what.
Some of the more common adjective pronouns are:—
All, another, any, both, each, either, enough, few, former, latter, little, many, much, neither, none, one, other, same, several, such, that, these, this, those, whole, etc. [Footnote: The adjective pronouns this, that, these, and those are called +Demonstrative+ pronouns. All, any, both, each, either, many, one, other, etc. are called +Indefinite+ pronouns because they do not point out and particularize like the demonstratives. Each, either, and neither are also called +Distributives+.
But for the fact that such words as brave, good, etc. in the phrases the brave, the good, etc. describe—which pronouns never do—we might call them adjective pronouns. They may be treated as nouns, or as adjectives modifying nouns to be supplied.
Some adjectives preceded by the are abstract nouns; as, the grand, the sublime, the beautiful.]
The word, phrase, or clause in the place of which a pronoun is used is called an +Antecedent+.
+Direction+.—Point out the pronouns and their antecedents in these sentences:—