They is a pronoun. Gosh, I'm in fifth grade and I could answer that!
No, it is a noun. The word "road" could be replaced by the pronoun "it."
No, must is not a pronoun. A pronoun is any word that can take the place of the noun in a sentence. Original sentence: Sally took the dog to her house. Sentence with pronouns: She took it there. She replaced Sally It replaced Dog There replaced house. It is usually a verb, though there are times when it is used as a noun -- but never a pronoun.
The word mailbags is a plural noun, not a pronoun. It could be replaced by the pronouns they or them.
No, it is not. The word "kitten" is a noun. It could be replaced by the pronoun it, or where the gender is known, by he, him, she, or her.
The antecedent is the noun, the noun phrase, or the pronoun that a pronoun replaces.
No, it is a noun. The word hall could be replaced by the third-person singular pronoun, it.
the propernoun
A noun or noun phrase that is replaced by a pronoun later in the sentence is called an antecedent. The pronoun refers back to the antecedent to avoid repetition and maintain clarity in the sentence.
The noun that is replaced by a pronoun is called the noun antecedent. Example:Word-o is a magician, he changes nouns into pronouns.
This means that when the noun to be replaced is singular, be sure to use a singular pronoun to take its place. When a pronoun takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns, be sure to use a plural pronoun to take its (their) place. When the noun to be replaced is a singular noun for a male, be sure to use a pronoun for a male (he, him, his, himself). When the noun to be replaced is a singular noun for a female, be sure to use a pronoun for a female (she, her, hers, herself).
No. The word democracy is a government of a specific form. It could be replaced by the third-person singular pronoun "it."
"Us" is the pronoun in the above asked question as it replaced "Six".