Subject
That would be the subject of the sentence.
The noun or noun phrase that is replaced by a pronoun later in the sentence or in a nearby sentence is called the antecedent.Examples:When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train (the noun 'George' is the antecedent of the personal pronoun 'he')Theseare my mother's homemade cookies. (the noun phrase 'my mother's homemade cookies' is the antecedent of the demonstrative pronoun 'these', even though the pronoun appears in the sentence before the antecedent)
The subject is the word (noun or pronoun) that the sentence is about.
The noun that a pronoun replaces is called its antecedent.The antecedent can be a noun or a pronoun.The antecedent can be a subject or an object in a sentence.
The word that a pronoun stands for or refers to in a sentence is called the antecedent.
A pronoun can be a noun . A noun is simply the subject of a sentence
The sentence with a pronoun is, "It was falling."A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun it takes the place of the subject noun banner, which is the only noun in the given sentence.
The correct answer is:C. stands for a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
Yes, a pronoun is a type of noun that can be used in place of a noun to avoid repetition in a sentence. Pronouns like "he," "she," or "it" serve the same function as nouns but refer to the noun indirectly.
An appositive is a noun or a pronoun that follows another noun or pronoun in a sentence to identify or explain.Example: Don't leave your burger there, my dog, Artemis will steal it.The noun Artemis is the appositive for the noun dog.
"The ant colony's" is not a sentence, it's a noun phrase. There is no possessive pronoun in this noun phrase. There is no pronoun in this noun phrase.
I think you mean what is the noun that a pronoun replaces. The noun that a pronoun replaces is called the antecedent. Example:In the sentence: John lost his math book, I think this belongs to him.The noun 'John' is the antecedent for the pronoun 'him'.