Pronouns don't have tenses; verbs are the words that have tenses.
Pronouns are words that take the place of nouns in a sentence; pronouns have cases:
Subjective: used for the subject of a sentence or clause.
Objective: used for the object of a verb or a preposition.
Possessive: used to show that something belongs to someone or something/
The six tenses of pronouns are:
The present tense for the verb "have" is "have" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they, and "has" for the pronouns he, she, and it.
Some past tense pronouns are "he," "she," "it," "we," "they," "I," "you," and "you all." These pronouns are used to refer to people or things that have already been mentioned or are known from the context.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
No have & has are present. I have/He has. Past is had.
Pronouns don't have tenses. Verbs are the part of speech that has tenses.Pronouns are words that take the place of nouns in a sentence; pronouns have cases.The cases of pronouns are:Subjective: used for the subject of a sentence or clause.Objective: used for the object of a verb or a preposition.Possessive: used to show that something belongs to someone or something.
Some past tense pronouns are "he," "she," "it," "we," "they," "I," "you," and "you all." These pronouns are used to refer to people or things that have already been mentioned or are known from the context.
In French, pronouns are used alongside verbs to indicate the subject of the sentence in the present tense. For example, "je" (I), "tu" (you), "il/elle" (he/she), "nous" (we), "vous" (you pl./formal), and "ils/elles" (they). These pronouns are placed before the verb in most cases, such as "je mange" (I eat) or "elle danse" (she dances).
They're both pronouns and don't have a tense
The past tense of "you" is "you." English verbs do not change based on the subject like they do in other languages.
"Their" is a possessive pronoun, not a verb. There cannot be a present tense for pronouns.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
Personal pronouns are not technically "present tense" in the same way that verbs are, since they do not express actions or states. Rather, personal pronouns are used to refer to individuals in a conversation or text, regardless of whether the context is in the past, present, or future.
To change direct speech to indirect speech for pronouns, you generally need to replace the pronouns with their corresponding indirect or reported speech pronouns. For example, 'I' in direct speech would change to 'he' or 'she' in indirect speech depending on the gender. Ensure that the pronouns match the subject of the reported speech and maintain the correct tense and meaning of the original statement.
The present tense of sit is "sits" (third person singular) and "sit" (for all other pronouns).
There are 6 object pronouns, they are: me, us, him, her, them, and whom.The pronouns 'you' and 'it' can functions as subject or object in a sentence.
She is a third person singular subject pronoun.Plural subject pronouns are we you they. For plural pronouns there is no -s added to the verb.We keepyou keepThey keep
You is a pronoun and pronouns don't show tense. Verbs show tense. You walk to school. - present simple, verb walk You walked to school - past simple, verb walked = past tense of walk.