No, in English a noun for a country (India) is a neuter noun, a word that has no gender. The appropriate personal pronoun that takes the place of the proper noun 'India' is it.
In creative writing it is perfectly acceptable to use gender specific nouns or pronouns for things that have no gender as it illustrates how a person feels about something.
No, the word "India" is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a specific place.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun "India" is "it".Example: I've been to India and found it a very interesting place.
what banks in Johnson county send your call to India
china
A pronoun is used to take the place of or stand in for a noun.
An accusative pronoun is a pronoun that typically acts as the direct object of a verb in a sentence. It indicates the recipient of the action being performed by the subject of the sentence. Examples in English include "me," "you," "him," "her," and "them."
noun if it is used as the subject pronoun if it is used as predicate
The word 'what' is used as an interrogative pronoun to ask a question and as relative pronoun to introduce a relative clause. Examples:interrogative pronoun: What time does the game start?relative pronoun: She didn't say what movie they saw.
An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun used to ask a question; they are what, which, who, whom, and whose. They are sometimes used with the suffixes 'ever' and 'soever'.
We is a subject pronoun, it is used as the subject of a sentence or clause. The object pronoun is us, used as the object of the verb or a preposition.Examples:We can go to the movies.Mother called us.
india
India
china