All of the words 'tried, hurried, tired, and planned' are past tense verbs and adjectives but none are nouns or pronouns.
A stress pronoun is not used when the subject is already clear in context, such as in simple sentences like "I am tired" or "She is reading a book." In these cases, the pronoun is not needed for clarity or emphasis.
In the sentence "Your feet are tired", the simple subject is "feet": Note that "feet" is the only noun in the sentence, and the only pronoun, "your", is in its possessive case, not suitable for a sentence subject.
The pronoun 'they' is the third person, plural, subjective pronoun. The pronoun they replaces more than one noun or a plural noun as the subject of a sentence or phrase. A third person pronoun represents the person or person spoken about. Example use:Fran and Frank bought a house on my street. Theybought the house on the corner.The Europeans were tired of the complexities of exchange rates so they created the Euro.
They both are tired
They both are tired
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
No. There are a lot of things wrong with this sentence.Her is a possessive pronoun not a subject pronoun. The correct pronoun is she.would of been should be would have beenworkin'n playin' should be working and playingto should be tootwo should be to2 should be toSo the sentence should be:She would have been too tired to continue working and playing to notice anything wrong.But this doesn't really make sense anyway.This is betterShe would have been too tired to continue working and playing or notice anything wrong.or thisShe would have been too tired to continue working and playing.or thisShe would have been too tired to notice anything wrong.
"Ich bin es müde" is a German equivalent of "I am fed up."Specifically, the subject pronoun "ich" means "I." The verb "bin" means "(I) am." The pronoun "es" means "it." The adjective "müde" means "tired."
it is you face
Attire!
An adjective modifies a pronoun, as it would a noun. But adjectives are connected to pronouns by linking verbs, rather than coming before a noun.E.g.the tall boy = he is talla mad customer = she seems madtired workers = they feel tired
No, a pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. For example:The Browns are my neighbors, they live in the house next to mine. The pronoun 'they' replaces the noun 'Browns' in the second part of the sentence.Marvin brought me some flowers, he knows that I love them. The pronouns 'me' and 'I' replace my name; the pronoun 'he' replaces the noun 'Marvin'; and the pronoun 'them' replaces the noun 'flowers'.An adjective is a word that describes a noun; for example hot soup, tired feet, or happy children.