The CD player lost its cord.
The pronoun its is a possessive adjective, placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to something (the CD player).
The CD player lost its cord.
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
rest, calm
Sure, please provide me with the sentence and the homophones to choose from.
No, "he or she" is not a pronoun-antecedent match with "anyone." A correct pronoun-antecedent match in this case would be "he or she can leave whenever they choose." Alternatively, using "they" as a gender-neutral singular pronoun is also widely accepted.
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
The correct pronoun is "I", the subjective, first person singular personal pronoun.The noun phrase "My brother and I" is the compound subject of the sentence.
Neither Patrick nor Jamal remembered to bring hishomework.
The choice of pronoun is governed by the rules of grammar. If you learn English, you will be able to choose the right pronoun.
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
rest, calm
The sentence "I have many friends." is a correct sentence. An alternate would be, "I have a lot of friends".
Sure, please provide me with the sentence and the homophones to choose from.
Question: 9 of 20:Choose the correct form of the word to complete the sentence. __________ paper was incomplete.Select one of the options below as your answer:A.BobsB.Bobs'C.Bob'sD.Bobs'sQuestion: 9 of 20:Choose the correct form of the word to complete the sentence. __________ paper was incomplete.Select one of the options below as your answer:A.BobsB.Bobs'C.
No, "he or she" is not a pronoun-antecedent match with "anyone." A correct pronoun-antecedent match in this case would be "he or she can leave whenever they choose." Alternatively, using "they" as a gender-neutral singular pronoun is also widely accepted.
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
them. im not sure but if you look at the sentence to word "books" means more than just one book, so it would make since to end the sentence with "them because the word "books" is plural (meaning more than one!) it would be "it" of the sentence read as if it just said the word book! so "them" should be the answer!
No des nada.