You, meaning 'all of you'. In some English dialects, y'all (or all y'all) can be used instead.
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective in the second person point of view (the person spoken to).Example: John, your lunch is ready.
'Do' is used in the simple present tense when using first person, second person, or third person plural. For example: I do, you do and they do. 'Did' is used as the simple past tense of 'do'. For example: I did, you did and they did.
'Do' is used in the simple present tense when using first person, second person, or third person plural. For example: I do, you do and they do. 'Did' is used as the simple past tense of 'do'. For example: I did, you did and they did.
NO!!! 1st person ; 'I' 2nd person; 'you' ( To answer the question). 3rd person; 'he/she/they'.
The term "one second" means to hold on for a moment. For example, if a person calls and someone answers and they ask for someone else, a person will say "one second" so they can get the other person on the phone.
Second person point of view is when an author uses the word 'you' for the narrative pronoun. An example of second person point of view is, "You fumbled with the doorknob and rushed into his house, soaking wet from the cold winter rain."
An example is "You". You do know that second person point of view is expressed as if you are doing what they do, but told from another angle, as in: You get in the car. It's not I am getting in the car, because I am not, you are. You speaks to the reader, not to themselves. You is also a pronoun, therefore, also a second person pronoun.
An example of a form of 'esse' is any one of its expressions in the present indicative tense. For example, the first person singular sum means '[I] am'. The second person singular es means '[you] are'. The third person singular estmeans '[he/she/it] is'. The first person plural sumus means '[we] are'. The second person plural estis means '[you all] are'. The third person plural sunt means '[they] are'.
Second person plural is the linguistic group in english grammar that refers to multiple people being for example addressed by a speaker . Are is the second person plural of the verb to be.
Speaking in the second person is when the main person of interest is referred to as "you". For example, in a narrative, instead of saying, "I jumped," or "He jumped," you would say, "You jumped". In conversation, when you speak to someone you are often speaking in the second person when you refer to someone as "you". A common example of writing in the second person would be a letter.
The words, "Do you have..." is the second person, the person spoken to.The third person, the person spoken about would be, "Does he have...", Does she have...", "Does it have...", or "Do theyhave..."
Second Person is written as "you." Everything you say must be from that point of view. For example: You get up in the morning and get out of bed. You see that it has snowed overnight. You go outside and walk to the park.