Yes. Ex: il est grand (he is tall) where the adjective grand qualifies the pronoun il.
"That's yesterday's news..." uses 'yesterday' to qualify the pronoun 'news'.
Your is a possessive pronoun. It is an adjective when used with a noun. (The word yours is a pronoun rather than an adjective.)
"Which one is this?" contains which acting as a demonstrative adjective. One is the subject. The other phrases: "This is is his hat." This is acting as a demonstrative pronoun and is the subject. "Whose is this?" Whose is acting as a relative pronoun and is the subject.
no. he is a pronoun. an adjective would have to be able to describe a noun or pronoun. He can't do that.
No. She is the nominative form of a personal pronoun. The possessive adjective is her, which is also the objective form of the pronoun. (The possessive pronoun is hers.)
It is both a pronoun and a adjective.
"French-Chinese dictionary" is an English equivalent of the French phrase dictionnaire français-chinois.Specifically, the masculine noun dictionnaire is "dictionary". The masculine adjective/noun/pronoun français means "French". The masculine adjective/noun/pronoun chinoistranslates as "Chinese".The pronunciation will be "deek-syoh-nehr" in French.
Harold Llewelyn Humphreys has written: 'A study of dates and causes of case reduction in the old-French pronoun' -- subject(s): French language, Case, Adjective, Pronoun, French literature
a pronoun
An adjective cannot be the direct object of a noun or pronoun.
no. he is a pronoun. an adjective would have to be able to describe a noun or pronoun. He can't do that.
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.)