In the phrase Canadian citizens, the word Canadian is an adjective, as it modifies, or more clearly defines, the noun, citizens. A pronoun is a word that replaces the noun, like it, she or they.
"The ant colony's" is not a sentence, it's a noun phrase. There is no possessive pronoun in this noun phrase. There is no pronoun in this noun phrase.
The antecedent is the noun, the noun phrase, or the pronoun that a pronoun replaces.
A prepositional phrase that modifies a noun or pronoun is an adjective prepositional phrase. An adjective prepositional phrase almost always follows the noun/pronoun it modifies.
An antecedent phrase is an opening phrase in a piece of music - followed by a consequent phrase, which "answers" the opening phrase.
That I am is a phrase, the individual words in the phrase are parts of speech. That -- demonstrative, determiner I -- pronoun am -- be verb
Citizens for a Canadian Republic was created in 2002.
The noun or pronoun in a prepositional phrase is the object of a preposition.
This is true.
This is true.
The noun phrase is: That woman over thereThe pronoun that can take the place of the noun phrase: sheEx: She will help.
appositive
No, 'her' is an objective pronoun, used as the object of a sentence or phrase. 'She' is the subjective pronoun, used as the subject of a sentence or phrase. Example uses: Subject: She is my sister. Object: The book belongs to her.