The pronouns that have two letters are it, we, us, and he.
The words he, she, and they are all personal pronouns; are all subjective forms; and all three contain the letters 'he'.
Three subjective pronouns are he, she, or they.
Three interrogative pronouns are "who," "whom," and "whose." These pronouns are used to ask questions about people or things.
no
The 16 three letter pronouns are:personal pronouns = you, she, him, herpossessive pronouns = his, itspossessive adjectives = his, her, its, ourinterrogative pronoun = whorelative pronoun = whoindefinite pronouns = all, any, few, one
Tennessee and Mississippi are the two states that have three doubled letters.
Three pronouns are ourselves, themselves, yourselves.
'What' is a four letter word, 'for' a three letter word, 'which' has five letters, 'yet' is spelled with three while 'it' has only two.
Starting with three different letters, six two-letter combinations can be made, if the order of the two letters is important. Only three combinations can be made if the order of the two letters is not important. Example: ABC AB AC BA BC CA CB - six variations But if (for your purposes) BA is the same as AB, Then there are only three: AB AC BC
two thousand five hundred and thirty three or two, five, three, three
one has three letters, two has three letters, three has five letters, and four has four letters, and so on
Subject pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we, they Object pronouns: me, you, him, her, it, us, them Possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs