Second person singular verbal and pronominal forms are, with rare exceptions, handled by Curtin in the archaic English fashion.
Disjunctive pronominal forms are typically found in the following environments.
The object enclitic is used mainly for pronominal forms of infinitive and imperative:
Specifically, lexical items from honorific registers replaced native Thai pronouns, resulting in an entirely new set of pronominal forms.
Personal pronouns are the most numerous and complex of pronominal forms in Thai.
Crow has three pronominal forms: bound; emphatic and contrastive; and interrogative-indefinite pronouns.
Old High German had a number of indefinite pronominal forms.
Adjectives have also pronominal form that is formed by merging adjectives with third person personal pronouns.
The pronominal forms are not substantially different from Khalkha.
This internal structure affects how they are used with pronominal forms (see above).