Yes, her is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a female as the object of a sentence or phrase (the pronoun she is the corresponding pronoun for the subject of a sentence or phrase). For example:
My sister won the state spelling bee; we are really proud of her.
The word 'which' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'which' is a relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.Adjectives do not have a possessive form.
The plural form of the first person, subjective pronoun 'I' is we.
The subjective pronouns are: I, we, he, she, they, and who. The objective pronouns are: me, us, him, her, them, and whom. The pronouns that function as both subjective and objective are: you and it.
Enchant is a verb, it has no pronoun form
The possessive pronoun is its (no apostrophe).
The plural form for the personal pronoun 'I' is we.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun 'this' is these.
The corresponding objective personal pronoun for the subjective pronoun they is them. Example:The Tylers came to visit and they brought the baby with them.
No. She is the nominative form of a personal pronoun. The possessive adjective is her, which is also the objective form of the pronoun. (The possessive pronoun is hers.)
The possessive form for the indefinite pronoun "nobody" is "nobody's."
The adjective form for the pronoun they is their.
No, her is not an adverb - it is a possessive adjective (form of a pronoun). The word hers is the possessive pronoun.