A singular pronoun is a word that replaces a singular noun, a word for one person or thing.
A plural pronoun is a word that replaces a plural noun or two or more nouns for people or things. Examples:
Singular: Jackie likes to bake, she brought cookies for our class.
Singular: This book must be Mark's, he lost his math book.
Plural: The birds come to my feeder every day; they come in the morning.
Plural: Bill, Bob, and I are going for a walk and we can take the dog with us.
Not all pronouns, the singular form only:
I, he, she and it.
And the singular indefinite pronouns:
Another, anybody, anyone, anything, each, either, less, little, much, neither, nobody, no one, nothing, one, other, somebody, someone, and something.
♥Singular pronouns are pronouns that take place of one or more nouns for example I,She,He,We,and it are singular pronouns because about what you and someone or something is doing.There are different kinds of noun: the singular pronoun and the plural pronoun (object pronouns) !!
The singular object pronouns are me, him, her, you, it, and whom.
The plural object pronouns are us, you, them, and whom.
Note that the pronouns 'you' and 'whom' can be singular or plural.
Pronouns that are used as objects are:
me
you
it
me
him
her
us
them
me
The pronoun 'he' is a third person, singular, subjective personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun (or name) for a male as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Example: Jack was nimble. Jack was quick. He jumped over the candlestick.
Did you mean does it take a singular or plural noun form? If so, the answer is singular. A range of products WAS available, not WERE available.
The plural form of a singular woman is women.
The singular noun is mass. The plural form is masses.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The singular subject personal pronouns are: I, you, he, she, it. The plural subject personal pronouns are: we, you, they.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun that is those.The singular demonstrative pronouns are this and that.The plural demonstrative pronouns are these and those.
Objects IS plural. The singular form is object.
Those is the plural form of that. That (singular) and those (plural) are the objective form of demonstrative pronouns.
The pronoun 'it' is singular, third-person singular. It can be a subject or an object.The plural third-person pronouns are they (for a subject), and them (for the object of a sentence, or the object of a preposition).Example: The dog is old. It has weak joints.Example: I do love tulips. They are my favorite and I often buy them.
Singular: when talking about one object plural: when talking about multiple objects (singular, single)
Pronouns change form based on number (singular or plural) and case (subject, object, or possessive). Examples:I live next door to them. The house with the black door is theirs. They painted the door themselves.
If more than one man is being referenced, in this case the correct plural for "him" (or "her") would be them (which is gender non-specific). They are object pronouns."They" is the plural form of "he" (or "she") which are subject pronouns.
The pronoun 'he' is a third person, singular, subjective personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun (or name) for a male as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Example: Jack was nimble. Jack was quick. He jumped over the candlestick.
Did you mean does it take a singular or plural noun form? If so, the answer is singular. A range of products WAS available, not WERE available.
The indefinite pronoun everybody always takes a singular verb form. The indefinite pronouns 'more' and 'all' can be used as singular or plural forms.
In English, only nouns and verbs can be plural in form. Adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, and prepositions do not change their form. For example: 'The house is built of stone'. (Singular noun and verb.) 'The houses are built of stone.' (Plural noun and verb.) Some adjectives and pronouns are plural in meaning, for example 'many' and 'we'. However, I take it that you are enquiring about words that have both a singular and a plural form.