"You sat between him and her during the sales conference."
The pronoun 'you' is a personal pronoun, second person pronoun (the person spoken to) that can functions as a subject or an object in a sentence.
The pronouns 'him' and 'her' are personal pronouns, the third person pronouns (the person spoken about) that function as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Yes, the pronouns 'you', 'him', and 'her' are used correctly.
The pronoun "you" is not used properly in the sentence. It should be "he sat between him and her during the sales conference" to maintain proper subject-verb agreement.
Yes, the pronouns "him" and "her" are used correctly in the sentence "you sat between him and her during the sales conference." "Him" is the correct object form of the pronoun, and "her" is the correct object form as well.
No, the pronouns are not used correctly. It should be: "I sat between him and me during the sales conference," or "I sat between he and she during the sales conference."
No, "during" is a preposition used to show when something happens or for how long. It is not a pronoun.
The word is "preposition." Prepositions are words that indicate the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence, such as location (in, on, under) or time (before, after, during).
Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. They typically indicate location, direction, time, or the relationship between two things. Examples of prepositions include "in," "on," "at," "under," and "beside."
Yes, the pronouns "him" and "her" are used correctly in the sentence "you sat between him and her during the sales conference." "Him" is the correct object form of the pronoun, and "her" is the correct object form as well.
No, the pronouns are not used correctly. It should be: "I sat between him and me during the sales conference," or "I sat between he and she during the sales conference."
Yes, the pronouns in the sentence are correct.The pronoun 'you' is the subject of the sentence. The pronoun 'you' functions as either a subject or an object.The pronouns 'him and her' are both object pronouns that are functioning as the compound object of the preposition'between'.
Yes, the pronouns are correct: you, subject of the sentence (the pronoun 'you' can function as both a subject and an object in a sentence)him and her, compound object of the preposition 'between' (both 'him' and 'her' are object pronouns)
After the in-conference records are considered, the tie-breaker is the head-to-head outcome between the two teams during the regular season.
Between 1970-1976, Marshall was an Independant. They joined the Southern Conference in 1977 and played there until 1996.
The word "they" is a pronoun which is taking the place of the noun "salesmen" as the subject of the second part of the compound sentence.The pronoun "they" is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing (salesmen).The pronoun "they" is a plural pronoun, a word that takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns.The pronoun "they" is a subjective pronoun, a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.
The british prime minister during the munich conference was Neville Chamberlaine
It is usually open during the Saturday of General Conference but is closed on Sundays.
No, "during" is a preposition used to show when something happens or for how long. It is not a pronoun.
In a conference, a group of scientists from the same field reviews the paper. In a peer review, members from other fields review the paper.
Moscow was after land and money that it wasnt granted during the Conference.