The sentence edited to use a reflexive pronoun:
Note: The sentence, "Don't work in pairs, everyone has to do the exercise." is an imperative sentence. The subject of the sentence is "you", an implied subject. In this sentence, the pronoun "you" is used as a plural.
The pears were packed in pairs so everyone got a pair each.
No, the word 'pair' is a noun (pair, pairs) and a verb (pair, pairs, pairing, paired).Examples:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. (noun)A new employee is paired with a senior employee to learn the job. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. They were very impressive.(the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'pair' in the second sentence)
Everyone's answer is different. You just have to read it and find out.
2 pairs of coconut stilts are all that is necessary for the game.
they blow upinto 1 billion peices and kill everyone
Yes. Factor pairs are always repeated across pairs since factor pairs are certain kinds of pairs.
In phonology, nominal pairs Almost pairs and Minimal pairs means pairs of words which are excepted for one phenomic difference sound alike.
Pairs they always come in pairs!
which two pairs of muscles are antagonistic pairs?
cytosine pairs with guanine and thymine pairs with adenine.
Lone-pair electrons, Bonded pairs of electrons
No, A pairs with T and G pairs with C