A pronoun is a word used in the place of a noun.
it for tree
he for John
she for Miss Smith
I,am,he,him they......Here are the 5 personal pronous
French fries
I love you is "je t'aime" in French.
Keen-Tah-Nee-Ah
Class & Children. Your & Little are simply adjectives.
That part of the dictionary is called the pronunciation guide or phonetic transcription. It provides a written representation of how the word is pronounced using symbols or characters.
A proper noun is a name and always starts with a capital letter (ex: Freddie, Susan, Toronto, California). A pronoun would be a word used to replace a noun (ex: he, she, it, they). Common pronous include: I, you, he, she, they, and it. I don't know if this answers your question or not, but hopefully it helps.
The pronouns that introduce a question are interrogativepronouns.The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.The antecedent of an interrogative pronoun is most often the answer to the question.The pronoun 'who' always functions as a subject. The pronoun 'who' takes the place of a singular or plural antecedent, a word for a person.Example: Who gave you the flowers?The pronoun 'whom' always functions the object in a prepositional phrase. The prepositional phrase functions as the subject of the sentence. The pronoun 'whom' takes the place of a singular or plural antecedent, a word for a person.Example: With whom are you going to the party?The pronoun 'what' takes the place of a word for a thing. The pronoun 'what' takes the place of a singular or plural antecedent.Examples: What is that? What are those?The pronoun 'which' takes the place of a singular or plural antecedent from a choice of two or more people or things.Examples: Which is your favorite? Which are your favorites?The pronoun 'whose' is a possessive form. The pronoun 'whose' takes the place of a singular or plural antecedent, a word for a person (or people) that possess something in the sentence.Examples: Whose entry won a prize? Whose entries won prizes?Note: The interrogative pronouns also function as relative pronouns, a word that introduces a relative clause.Example: The person whose entry won was the winner last year.