The word children's is not a pronoun, it is a noun. The word children is the plural form for the noun child. The word children's is a plural, possessive noun.
A singular pronoun takes the place of a singular noun.The 'antecedent pronoun agreement' is ensuring that the pronoun used agrees in number (singular or plural) and gender(he, she, or it) with antecedent (the word that the pronoun is replacing).
The singular pronoun in the sentence is which, an interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces a question.The pronoun 'which' takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question, which in this case, is the word 'which'.
Pronoun-verb agreement requires a correct match between a pronoun and a verb based on number (singular or plural).A singular pronoun requires a verb for a singular subject.Example: She is expected at noon. (singular subject pronoun)A plural pronoun requires a verb for a plural subject.Example: They are expected at noon. (plural subject pronoun)
The indefinite pronoun nobody is a singular form. Example:Nobody was taking responsibility.
A singular pronoun is a pronoun that is used to replace a singular noun in a sentence. Examples of singular pronouns include "he," "she," "it," "him," "her," and "it." They are used to avoid repeating the noun multiple times in a sentence.
The pronoun 'its' is a possessive, singular, neuter pronoun.
Yes, the indefinite pronoun 'everyone' is a singular pronoun (everyone).Example: Everyone is ready to go.
No, it's a personal pronoun (both singular, and plural) in the 2nd person. Yours is a possessive pronoun.
Yes, "anyone" is a singular pronoun. It refers to an individual person but does not specify gender.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
"It" is the singular form of the pronoun "they."
The pronoun she is singular; if there are two or more females, the appropriate pronoun is they (subjective) or them (objective).