Il
Two boys? You could say ellos, which means they.
"Je" in French translates to "I" in English. It is used as the subject pronoun to refer to oneself when speaking or writing.
"il" is a masculine pronoun, standing for "he". The feminine pronoun (for "she") is "elle".
The subject of a sentence may be either a noun or pronoun. An example is 'The boy was home.' The subject is the noun boy.
Noun - common noun to be exact. The pronoun to use for boy is he (subject) or him (object).
The personal pronoun 'he' is a subject pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a male as the subject of a sentence or a clause. Examples:Mindy gave the boy a cookie and he said 'Thank you'.Mr. Marks, he is my neighbor, gave me flowers from his garden.
subject pronoun
In this sentence : The boy next door goes to our school.The subject is boy (a noun)The complete subject is the boy next doorThe simple subject is the noun or pronoun in the subject position and the complete subject is all the other words associated with the subject.
"It" as a subject pronoun can be said as il or elle. Il is masculine. Elle is feminine. "they" as a subject pronoun can be said as ils or elles. Ils is masculine and Elles is feminine.
Harold Llewelyn Humphreys has written: 'A study of dates and causes of case reduction in the old-French pronoun' -- subject(s): French language, Case, Adjective, Pronoun, French literature
Subject pronoun - I, You, He, We, She, They, It, you ( plural) Object pronoun - Me, You, Her, Him, Us, The, It
"It can." In that sentence, the pronoun "it" is the simple subject.