The pronouns use to form questions are interrogative pronouns. Interrogative pronouns take the place of the noun that is the answer to the question.
The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.
Where are you? I'm at school.
Which coat do you like? I like the this one.
The pronoun where is an interrogative pronoun, a word used to ask a question. Where takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question. Example:Where are my keys? Your keys are on the counter.
Their is a possessive pronoun, the third person plural. The pronoun their can be use as the subject or the object of a sentence.
To answer the question "How are you?", use the first person, subjective, personal pronoun "I" or "we", since the pronoun "you" is both singular and plural. Examples:How are you? I am fine.How are you? We are fine.
A pronoun. It replaces the use of a noun.ex. instead of...This question is stupidthe question being the nounyou could use it as a pronoun...it is stupid
The pronoun 'that' is a demonstrative pronoun; a word to indicate, to show, to point to. The pronoun 'that' is also a relative pronoun; a word that introduces a relative clause. Examples:Demonstrative pronoun: That is my favorite movie.Relative pronoun: This is the movie that I like.The word 'that' is also and adjective, an adverb, and a conjunction.
Interrogative pronoun
'than' is not a pronoun.
You yourself can answer that question.
Interrogative pronouns introduce a questions. The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose. Examples: Who is your math teacher? From whom did you get the book? What time is it? Which movie do you want to see? Whose question is this?
The pronoun 'what' is an interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces a question and can also function as a relative pronoun that introduces a relative clause. Example:What did he do? He did what you told him.
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.