The neuter pronouns are it and its.
it, its, you, I we, theirs, mine, them etc.
The personal pronoun it takes the place of the noun neuter as a word for a word that has no gender or a thing that has no gender.
since it can be both neuter
Yes, the noun 'supervision' is a neuter noun, a word for a thing.
A neuter gender noun is a word for something that has no gender.Examples are:arrogancebarkconcretedemocracyedgefashionGermanyhouseicejokekneelunchmoneynotebookopinionpurplequestionrestaurantstartimeumbrellavelvetwaterxenonyearzoo
Yes, the noun class is a word that has no gender, a neuter noun.
The pronoun 'its' is a possessive, singular, neuter pronoun.
The personal pronoun it takes the place of the noun neuter as a word for a word that has no gender or a thing that has no gender.
Neuter. "It" is a third person neuter pronoun, others being "he" and "she."
A neuter gender word is a noun or a pronoun for something that has no gender.The neuter pronouns are it (singular), they(subjective plural) and them (objective plural).Some examples of neuter nouns are:actionballooncaredooredgefistgashopeicejuicekneelovemountainnatureovalpointquietrazorsporttableunguentvaluewaterx-rayyellowzoo
Éste (as a pronoun) ésta (as a pronoun) este (as a demonstrative adjective) esta (demonstrative adjective) esto (demonstrative pronoun, neuter gender)
No, the indefinite pronoun someone is a common gendernoun, a word for a male or a female. A neuter word is a word for something that has no gender.
The sentence, "The local museum is extending its hours for the summer.", has the correct pronoun-antecedent combination.The pronoun its is the third person, singular, neuter possessive adjective for the third person, singular, neuter antecedent noun, museum.
When the number (singular or plural) and the gender (male, female, or neuter) of the pronoun agree with the antecedent, there is no error.
Using 'one' as a pronoun is the neuter third-personsingular.
The word it is a pronoun; the third person, singular, subjective or objective, neuter pronoun. A word that takes the place of a noun for a thing.
The word "book" is an example of a neuter noun in many languages.
The pronoun 'it' is the singular, neuter, personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a thing. The pronoun 'it' functions as a subject or an object in a sentence. Examples:This is my new watch? It was a gift from my dad, I like it very much.