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What is pronous?

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Anonymous

14y ago
Updated: 7/3/2023

A pronoun is a word used in the place of a noun.

it for tree

he for John

she for Miss Smith

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What are 5 personal pronous?

I,am,he,him they......Here are the 5 personal pronous


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French fries


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I love you is "je t'aime" in French.


How do you pronous Selena quintanillas last name?

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What is the suitable pronous for our class moved quickly to help the little children?

Class & Children. Your & Little are simply adjectives.


What do you call the part of the dictionary that tells you how to pronous the word?

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.


Proper name abbreviations?

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.


Are pronous used when asking questions are interrpronouns?

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.