"Representatives" is a noun. It refers to individuals who are chosen to act or speak on behalf of a group or organization.
A congress of representatives
The word 'representatives' is a noun, not a pronoun.An antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.Example: When Henry comes home he reads the paper. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the antecedent noun 'Henry')The word 'representatives' is the plural form of the noun 'representative', a word for a person or a thing.The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'representatives' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Examples:Our representatives don't understand the situation. They don't know what we want. We should tell them. (the noun 'representatives' is the antecedent noun)You and I can get the representative attention if we work together. (the pronoun 'we' takes the place of the antecedent pronouns 'you and I')
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
An antecedent is the word, phrase, or clause to which a pronoun refers, as shown by the context. The antecedent is "representatives" because it is "their" (pronoun) negotiations - this is assuming that it is the representatives and not the strikers that are doing the negotiating.
The noun 'kind' is an abstact noun as a word for a type or class. The abstract noun form of the adjective "kind" is "kindness".
It's no kind of noun it is an adjective. The noun is ravenousness.
The the noun 'kind' is an abstract noun as a word for type or class; having similar characteristics.The abstract noun for kind is kindness.
The word 'kind' is both an adjective and a noun. The noun kind, a singular, common, abstract noun is a word for a group of individuals or instances sharing common traits; a category.The noun forms for the adjective kind are kindness and kindliness.
It isn’t a noun at all. Replaces a noun.
A common noun
She is a noun.