The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective , a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something. Example:
A possessive adjective should not be confused with the possessive pronoun, theirs, which takes the place of the noun that belongs to someone or something. Example:
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
The kind of noun or pronoun that corresponds with myself is a reflexive pronoun. The personal pronoun that would be used in this case is 'I'. In reflexive form you would say 'myself'.
'than' is not a pronoun.
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
"Of" is not a pronoun. He, she, it, they, them, are all pronouns. "Of" is a preposition.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
The word 'or' is not a pronoun; or is a conjunction, a preposition, or a noun.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
It's called a reflexive pronoun.
Video is not a pronoun, it is a common noun.
The pronouns in the sentence are what (an interrogative pronoun) and you (a personal pronoun).
The kind of noun or pronoun that corresponds with myself is a reflexive pronoun. The personal pronoun that would be used in this case is 'I'. In reflexive form you would say 'myself'.
"That" is a demonstrative pronoun. You "demonstrate" which thing you mean.