No, single girl is not a pronoun. The word 'single' is an adjective describing the noun 'girl'.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun; in the case of 'single girl', the appropriate pronoun is 'she' for a subject and 'her' as the object of a verb or a preposition.
The demonstrative pronoun "this" indicates a single object closest to the speaker.
Girl is a noun. A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun. "She" is an example of a pronoun to replace girl.
"Girl" is a noun referring to a female child or young woman. It is not a pronoun.
She, her, girl?
"That" is the demonstrative pronoun used to indicate a single object far from the speaker.
You would use the subject pronoun "tú" when talking to a young girl in Spanish.
The nouns in the sentence are girl, entry, diary.The pronoun in the sentence is her, a possessive adjective describing the noun 'diary' as belonging to the girl.
When you use 'her' instead of 'girl', you are using a pronoun.
Yes, the word who is a pronoun. It can be an interrogative pronoun, a pronoun that asks a question or it can be relative pronoun that introduces a relative clause. Example uses:Interrogative pronoun: Who would like some brownies?Relative pronoun: The girl who sits next to me is from Poland.
The pronoun in the sentence is 'many' an indefinite pronoun, which takes the place of a noun for a large number.
The indefinite pronoun 'anybody' is a singular form.
The indefinite pronoun 'anybody' is a singular form (anybody).Example: Anybody is welcome at our block party.