The pronouns that take the place of the proper noun 'Major Stephen Long' are:
The personal pronouns are he as a subject and himas an object in a sentence.
The possessive pronoun and the possessive adjective is his.
The reflexive pronoun and the intensive pronoun is himself.
Examples:
They are not going anywhere. they = personal pronoun are = helping verb not = adverb going = verb anywhere = indefinite pronoun
The nouns in the sentence are: faces and mirror. The pronoun is: you
An antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.In the example sentence, the indefinite pronoun anybody is the antecedent of the indefinite pronoun they.Note: When the pronoun 'they' is used to represent people in general, it is an indefinite pronoun. When the pronoun 'they' takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns for specific people or things, it is a personal pronoun.
This is known as a pronoun reference error, where it's unclear which noun the pronoun is referring to. To fix this error, make sure the pronoun clearly connects to a specific noun in the sentence for clarity.
In the sentence "His job is to make children laugh," the pronoun is "his." It refers to a male individual whose occupation involves entertaining children.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun or an intensive pronoun.The pronoun 'yourself' is a second person, singular pronoun.When used as a reflexive pronoun, it 'reflects back' to its antecedent.When used as an intensive pronoun, it emphasizes its antecedent.Examples:Mable, please make yourself comfortable. (reflexive)Mable, I can't believe you made this yourself. (intensive)
The pronoun that takes the place of the plural noun 'girls' is they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Example:The girls will be home soon. They will be hungry. I will make lunch for them.
Nothing
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'event' is it.Example: The event was a big success. It was well attended.
No, Oxygen is not a pronoun. He, She, Him, Her, It, Its, They, Them, Their, We, Us, and Our are all pronouns.
Yes, every noun has a pronoun. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'flour' is 'it'.Example: Be sure to put flour on the shopping list, we'll need it to make the birthday cake.
Pronoun and speech