Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.Cleopatra's teachers were private tutors.
The possessive form for the plural noun teachers is teachers'.Example: The teachers' conference is scheduled for Friday.
teachers
The possessive form for the plural noun teachers is teachers'.Example: The teachers' committee voted to permanently ban homework.
The possessive form of the plural noun teachers is teachers'.Example: The teachers' meeting is scheduled for four o'clock.
The pronoun in the sentence, 'him', is correct if the one the sentence refers to is a male. The pronoun 'him' is a singular, objective, personal pronoun which is functioning as the object of the preposition 'at'.The preposition 'at' is not the best choice, a better choice is 'for' (were delighted for him).Note: The word 'both' can function as an indefinite pronoun when it takes the place of a noun. However, in this sentence, it functions as an adjective, describing the nouns 'teachers and students'.Example use as a pronoun: The teachers and the students were both delighted...
The pronoun for Tomas is 'he' as a subject and 'him' as an object of a sentence or clause.The pronoun for Susan is 'she' as a subject and 'her' as an object of a sentence or clause.The pronoun for Tomas and Susan is 'they' as a subject and 'them' as an object of a sentence or clause.Examples:Tomas is a teacher. He teaches math at the high school. I met him at a teachers' conference.Susan is a teacher. She teaches math at the high school. I met her at a teachers' conference.Tomas and Susan are teachers. They teach math at the high school. I met them at a teachers' conference.The pronoun for lizard is 'it'. The pronoun for the plural, lizards, is 'they' for the subject and 'them' as an object of a sentence or clause.Examples:I saw a lizard, it ran under your chair.She loved the lizards at the zoo. They mesmerized her and she wants to go see them again.
Yes, the objective, personal pronoun 'him' functioning as the object of the preposition 'at' is the correct form.However, the preposition 'at' is a bit clumsy. A more appropriate preposition in this sentence is 'for'.Example: Both the teachers and the students were delighted for him receiving such high scores.This is easier to see when the sentence is simplified, "Teachers and students were delighted for him."
He liked his teachers, but each had a personality that clashed with his. This might be correct, "each" is an indefinite pronoun, for those of us who don't study English!
There is no vague pronoun reference in that sentence.The pronouns in the sentence are:which - a relative pronoun that introduces the relative clause;their - a possessive adjective 'their' refers back to 'girls'.
Yes, the pronoun 'who' can be either singular or plural.Examples:Who was there? I was there.Who were there? The Smiths and the Joneses were there.Additional examples:Who was your favorite teacher? The teacher who taught English was my favorite.Who were your favorite teachers? They were the teachers who gave the least homework.
The word faculty used as a collective noun (group of teachers) can use either the singular third person pronoun (it), or the plural (they, them) depending on whetherthe faculty is acting as a whole or as individual members.The word faculty meaning a sense (e.g. in possession of your faculties) uses the singular third-person pronoun, it.
The pronoun 'them' is a personal pronoun, the third person plural pronoun.
The pronoun her is an object pronoun; for example:We see her everyday.
A pronoun's antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.
subject pronoun
Yes, a subjective pronoun is a type of personal pronoun. A personal pronoun replaces the names of people + things. Subjective and Objective pronoun both belongs in the personal pronoun category.