There can be several pronouns for corn. It depends upon its use in a sentence.
The CORN (noun) is fresh.
IT (pronoun) is fresh.
Do you want to eat CORN (noun)?
Do you want to eat SOME (pronoun)?
Maze is a noun; the pronoun for maze is it. Example:We will try the corn maze, they say that it is difficult.
No, the pronoun 'it' is not the possessive case.In the sentence, the personal pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'corn' (it could thrive in the desert=corncould thrive in the desert).The possessive form of the pronoun 'it' is its (no apostrophe).Example: If the ability to grow in an arid land could be transplanted from cactus to corn, its success the desert would be assured. (possessive, the success of it)
The antecedent of the underlined pronoun "them" is "the children."
"Come maiz", that is the imperative form of the verb. "Como maiz" is for I eat corn. The verb changes depending of the Pronoun.
It depends on the sentence in which you are using it in. Here are some examples of each:'Give my brother and me the corn flakes on the counter.''My brother and I are going camping without corn flakes.'The trick to use each properly is to eliminate the 'my brother and' and just say the sentence with just 'I' or 'me' in the sentence. Here are the repeated sentences without 'my brother and':'Give me the corn flakes on the counter.''I am going camping without corn flakes.'(The reason 'are' was changed to 'am' in the second sentence was because 'are' is plural, and was referring to you and your brother, while 'am' is only referring to you.)As long as the sentence makes sense, as shown in these two sentences, 'my brother and me' or 'my brother and I'are both acceptable wordings.
"Them" is a personal pronoun and is typically used as an object pronoun, referring to people or things being spoken about. It is not a possessive pronoun like "theirs" or "theirs."
The clause begins with a relative pronoun (that) so it is an adjective clause.Adverb clauses begin with a subordinating conjunction and answer how, when, or why, as adverbs do.E.g. In the sentence "The corn that your neighbor raises", "that your neighbor raises" describes "corn" which is a noun so "that your neighbor raises" is an adjective phrase.
The pronoun her is an object pronoun; for example:We see her everyday.
A pronoun's antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.
subject pronoun
Yes, a subjective pronoun is a type of personal pronoun. A personal pronoun replaces the names of people + things. Subjective and Objective pronoun both belongs in the personal pronoun category.
These are the eight types of pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we you, and they