No, the word celebrate is a verb: celebrate, celebrates, celebrating, celebrated.
The verb to celebrate is to observe in some way a person or thing with a ceremony, a party, an event, or a public acknowledgement.
Example: We will celebrate our parents' anniversary with a party.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: The party is to celebrate my parents' anniversary. They have been married for forty years. (the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'parents' in the second sentence)
"Them" is a personal pronoun and is typically used as an object pronoun, referring to people or things being spoken about. It is not a possessive pronoun like "theirs" or "theirs."
subject pronoun
These are the eight types of pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we you, and they
The word 'who' is a pronoun, an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun. The pronoun 'who' is the best pronoun for who. Examples:Who is your new math teacher? He is the one whotaught algebra last year.
No, the word "pronoun" is a noun, a word for a part of speech; a word for a thing.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'pronoun' is it.Example: A pronoun is a part of speech. It takes the place of a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
Pronoun, more specifically the first person plural personal pronoun.
An adjectival pronoun is a pronoun which accompanies a noun.
Yes, everything is a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun.
The pronoun 'its' is a possessive, singular, neuter pronoun.
pronoun
Pronoun: They. βTheyβ is a plural pronoun for the chairs.
All of them celebrate when they celebrate.