The possessive adjective 'our' is a first person pronoun, a word that takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns or pronouns to describe a noun as belonging ones speaking.
Examples:
You and I can have our lunch in the park.
Jack and I are having our lunch in the park.
My friends and I are having our lunch in the park.
We are having our lunch in the park.
The third person singular is has (he has, she has, it has).The first and second person singular is have (I have, you have).The first, second, and third person plural is have (we have, you have, they have).
3rd
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective in the second person point of view (the person spoken to).Example: John, your lunch is ready.
The word anybody is a form of the third person.
First person. Nope. "He" is the third person, masculine, singular, subjective pronoun.
The word 'therefore' is an adverb. Adverbs do not have 'person'.
The pronoun 'it' is the third person, the thing spoken about.The first person is the one speaking (I, me, we, and us).The second person is the one spoke to (you).The third person is the one spoken about (he, him, she, her, they, them, and it).
it would be second person because it is directed to the person to whom the speaker is addressing. First person is the speaker. Third person is the person who is the subject of the converstaion.
"Me" is first person. First person = speaker (or group including the speaker); second: person(s) spoken to "you"; third: spoken about "he," "she," "they."
The personal pronoun you is a second person pronoun, which takes the place of the noun/name of the person or persons (singular of plural) spoken to.
"Are" is the first, second and third person plural of "to be".
It is second person point of view, but how did this get categorized as a math question?