I see that Stanley is chatting next to Yeny in the class. Yeny is laughing at him. Brittany is mad at her. She is ignoring her. Yeny is gossiping with them. Why are you always gossiping about us? We are not talking about you. We are talking about your essay and how much we like it.
Possessive? Okay. Here goes.
I think you should write your own essay. If I write it for you, you will never learn. You could always ask your teacher for help, as I have no degree, and did not spend thousands of dollars on an English degree to help you. I also would do my own homework but that is not my point. Mypoint is, your homework will help you learn. And you are not doing it, so you are not learning.
He went to see her on the weekend. She was happy to see him but he was sullen all weekend so they had a quiet weekend. He went back to hishome on Sunday. She stayed at her house. Itwas raining.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place or thing. Write your paragraph without using names. For example, this short paragraph uses no proper nouns. All of the nouns in this paragraph are common nouns.
give a short paragraph using collective nouns
I gave her the book.
One must always strive to do their best in everything they do.
Compound words include schoolhouse, football. sometimes, and today. The football player left the small schoolhouse in the afternoon and saw a rattlesnake.
by using god gifted transport medium that is our leg and by using solar vehicles
Every pronoun must first be preceded by an antecedent, that is a noun for which the pronoun is going to substitute. If I were to mention a boy, then the word 'boy' becomes the antecedent to the pronoun 'he' or 'him'. I could say 'the boy sat down', and then after always refer to him as 'he' or 'him'. For example 'he is still sitting', 'I didn't tell him to move', 'He is a very nice boy I like him'. The pronoun 'he' is for the subjective case, while 'him' is for the objective case.
HE went to the doctor. the BOY ate the pizza
This is a sentence using a pronoun.The word this is a demonstrative pronoun.
Each went their own way. (Each representing every person)
You can say "me and my family" by using the pronoun "we" followed by "my family." For example, you can say "We, my family and I..."
The pronoun neither is an indefinite pronoun; an indefinite pronoun does not refer to a specific person, thing, or amount. The pronoun neither is used to say not one or another of any person(s) or thing(s). Example: Neither you or the others will have to take that test.