The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'acts' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.
Example: We represent acts of all kinds. They can be famous or not, we find them work.
Pronoun
Hadn't is a contraction of the verb 'had' and the adverb 'not'; the contraction acts as a verb.
An accusative pronoun is a pronoun that typically acts as the direct object of a verb in a sentence. It indicates the recipient of the action being performed by the subject of the sentence. Examples in English include "me," "you," "him," "her," and "them."
That is a demonstrative pronoun that often acts as an adjective. I'll have that cake.
The subject is the word (noun or pronoun) that the sentence is about.
No, we're is a contraction of the pronoun of we and the verb are. We're acts as the subject and auxiliary verb in a sentence. Example sentence:We are on our way. OR, We're on our way.
No, it is a possessive noun, which acts like a adjective. The related possessive adjective is her and the related possessive pronoun is hers.
adjective clause
Yes, a number can be a noun, or pronoun. It acts as an adjective when it appears with another noun.
The word everything is a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun. A pronoun renames a noun or acts as a substitute for a noun; an indefinite pronoun does not refer to any specific person, thing or amount. For example, instead of saying, "I bought the eggs, honey, and cereal," you could say, "I bought everything." Here, "everything" acts as a substitute for the nouns "the eggs, honey, and cereal."
The pronoun 'their' is a possessiveadjective, a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The possessive adjective 'their' can describe a subject or an object of in sentence.Examples:Their car is new. (describes the subject noun 'car')I made their favorite. (describes the direct object 'favorite')I've been invited to their party. (describes the object of the preposition 'party')
A pronoun is any word that acts as a noun. An adjective modifies a noun. The difference between a possessive adjective (my, his, her) and a possessive pronoun is that the adjective form can be used before a noun, while the pronoun form is used with a verb. The pronoun "his" is both an adjective and a pronoun, while "her" is an adjective and "hers" is a pronoun, one that could not be used before a noun (It is her ball. It is her ball.)