Yes.
No, the word 'book' is a noun, a word for a thing.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:This is a good book. You may borrow it if you like. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'book' in the second part of the sentence)
The correctly used pronoun is C, it(antecedent 'dog')In sentence A, the pronoun 'they' is a subjective pronoun used as the object of the preposition 'of'.The correct sentence is: Sarah has two dogs and takes good care of them.In sentence B, thepronoun'you' is the second person; the noun 'Sarah' (the antecedent from the previous sentence) is the third person.The correct sentence is: Sometimes they go for walks with her.
The possessive form of the personal pronoun 'it' is its (no apostrophe).example: The book was half price because its cover was torn.The contractions of the personal pronoun 'it' are formed using an apostrophe to indicate the letters that are left out.example: It's a good book even with some damage. (It is a good book...)There is no possessive form for the possessive pronoun 'its'.When the possessive pronoun its is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, the full form of pronoun and verb are used.example: Its was the only one with a torn cover.When the possessive adjective 'its' is used, the noun that is described is the word that form the possessive.example: Its cover's damage made no difference to me.
The correct spelling is discipline (a field of study, good behavior, or correcting misbehavior).
The word 'mines' is both a noun (mine, mines) and a verb (mine, mines, mining, mined).A pronoun can be used with the noun mines or a pronoun can take the place of the noun mines. Examples:Our mines are producing to full capacity. They are good source of employment for their local economies.The verb can be used with a pronoun as the subject or the object of the verb. Example:Larry makes a good living from turquoise but he won't tell where he mines them.
No, the correct phrasing is "It was said that she and Nick were just good friends." The subject pronoun "her" should be changed to the subjective pronoun "she" to maintain correct grammar.
No, the word 'book' is a noun, a word for a thing.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:This is a good book. You may borrow it if you like. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'book' in the second part of the sentence)
The sentence: "He concurs this book is good." is not grammatically correct. Alternatives include "He concurs; this book is good." or "He concurs that this book is good." A sentence cannot have two verb-subject pairs without some kind of conjunction.
The pronoun in this sentence is "I," which refers to the speaker or writer.
When a book is good, I get lost. It was this sentence grammatical corrected.
"You were looking good" is the correct grammar. "You" is a second person pronoun that always takes the verb form "were" in past tense, regardless of the situation. "Was" is used with singular subjects, whereas "were" is used with plural subjects.
Geometry is study because book. Number good? Shape. I like Circle. That how geometry is study.
The correct grammar is "Good thing I have this cracker." The pronoun "I" should always be capitalized.
The correct phrase is "It was just as well I sent the book." This means that sending the book was the right thing to do or that it worked out fine.
Example sentence:I wrote you this sentence. (direct object is 'sentence, indirect object is the personal pronoun 'you')
The correctly used pronoun is C, it(antecedent 'dog')In sentence A, the pronoun 'they' is a subjective pronoun used as the object of the preposition 'of'.The correct sentence is: Sarah has two dogs and takes good care of them.In sentence B, thepronoun'you' is the second person; the noun 'Sarah' (the antecedent from the previous sentence) is the third person.The correct sentence is: Sometimes they go for walks with her.
The term for this is a faulty reference. In good writing, the pronoun and its antecedent are always clearly related, and it is easy to discern the relationship between the two words.Using the correct pronoun is called pronoun-antecedent agreement.