"Whom did she say would meet us at the swimming pool."
The pronouns in the sentence are:
The underlined pronoun "whom" is used as the object of the verb "say" in the sentence. It is referring to the person who she indicated would meet us at the swimming pool.
The pronoun in the sentence is "What."
Can you provide the sentences you would like me to evaluate for the function of the underlined objective complement?
The pronoun in the sentence is he.The pronoun 'he' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person.The pronoun 'he' is a singular pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for one person.The pronoun 'he' is a word that takes the place of a noun for a male.The pronoun 'he' is a subjective pronoun, a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The pronoun 'he' is the subject of the example sentence.
No, "she will never agree to that" does not use a possessive pronoun. The pronoun "she" is a subject pronoun in this sentence. Possessive pronouns show ownership or relationship, such as "her" or "hers."
No, "who'd" is a contraction of "who would" or "who had" and is not a pronoun. Pronouns are words that can replace nouns in a sentence, such as he, she, they, etc.
There is no faulty pronoun in the sentence. There is no pronoun in the sentence. In this sentence, the word 'their' is an adjective; the pronoun form of the word is 'theirs'. Using the pronoun, the sentence would read: The task force submitted theirs a week early. The pronoun 'theirs' replaces the word 'recommendation'.
I assume you mean the word "this". This can be either a demonstrative adjective or a demonstrative pronoun. In this sentence "this" is an adjective: "This car is mine." In this sentence "this" is a pronoun: "This is my car."
No, "she will never agree to that" does not use a possessive pronoun. The pronoun "she" is a subject pronoun in this sentence. Possessive pronouns show ownership or relationship, such as "her" or "hers."
Using an object pronoun, the sentence would be:'The game wardens noticed it.'
She carefully wrote the letter. This rewrite makes the subject a pronoun.
That would be the subject of the sentence.
No. The predicate of the sentence is objective and, therefore, the correct pronoun would be 'me'.
No, "your" should not be capitalized in the sentence "girls night with your mom" as it is a possessive pronoun describing a relationship.
The pronoun in the sentence is "What."
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The only noun in the sentence is the compound noun, palm trees. Example:They were growing abundantly.
The pronouns in the sentence, "She told you herself thathe would be here." are:she; personal pronoun, subject of the sentenceyou; personal pronoun, direct object of the verbherself; reflexive pronoun, indirect object of the verbthat, relative pronoun, introduces the relative clausehe, personal pronoun, subject of the relative clause
It is intensive because the pronoun "himself" emphasizes that Jason did the remodeling personally without any external help. Reflexive pronouns, on the other hand, reflect the action back onto the subject of the sentence.