Appositives.
Yes, those are pronouns; 'someone' and 'another' are indefinite pronouns; 'whom' is an interrogative pronoun, the objective form of 'who'.
The pronouns that start with letter T are:Personal pronouns, they and themDemonstrative pronouns, this, that, these, and thosePossessive pronoun, theirsPossessive adjective, theirReflexive/Intensive pronoun, themselvesRelative pronoun, that
No, "one" is typically used as a pronoun to refer to an unspecified person. It is considered an indefinite pronoun.
The type of pronoun that helps link phrases and clauses to the rest of the sentence is a relative pronoun. Examples include "who," "which," and "that." Relative pronouns introduce subordinate clauses and connect them to the main clause in the sentence.
No, pronouns and prepositions serve different grammatical functions in a sentence. Pronouns usually replace nouns, while prepositions show the relationship between nouns, pronouns, and other words in a sentence.
Nouns and pronouns act as the subject, the direct object, or the indirect object of sentences, phrases, and clauses.
The reciprocal pronouns are each other and one another.
Reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, themselves) Intensive pronouns (myself, himself, herself) Demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those) Interrogative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which) Relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) Indefinite pronouns (everyone, nobody, nothing) Possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers) Reciprocal pronouns (each other, one another) Personal pronouns (I, we, you, he, she) Indefinite pronouns (someone, anybody, everything)
Subject pronoun:I, you, we, he, she, it, they, who. Object pronouns: me, you, us, him, her, it, them, whom, each other, one another.
No, "world" is a common noun, a person, place or thing. Pronoun is a word that takes the place of another noun. Pronouns are I, we, you, he, she, it, and they.
"Her" is an object pronoun. Subject pronouns include "she" and "I," while object pronouns include "her" and "me."
All of the pronouns are pronouns only; I, me, you, he, him, she, her, they, them, and it.