A jackrabbit hopped by them.
A jackrabbit hopped by Ty and her.
The pronoun in the sentence is you.The pronoun 'you' is a personalpronoun in the secondperson (the one spoken to).In this sentence, the pronoun 'you' is singular(based on the context of the sentence), but the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural.
The noun is creatures.The pronoun is what (an interrogative pronoun).The adjective is these (describing the noun creatures).
The pronoun in the sentence is which, an interrogative pronoun.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question. The antecedent of an interrogative pronoun is usually the answer to the question.The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.
The indefinite pronoun is everybody, a word that takes the place of the noun (or nouns) for an unnamed number of people.Other pronouns in the sentence are:us, a personal pronounher, a possessive adjectiveNote: The pronoun 'you' is the implied subject of the verb 'look'.
The words, "the banana belonging to the chimp" is not a sentence, it's a sentence fragment, a noun clause (a group of words that contains a noun or pronoun and a verb but is an incomplete thought that can't stand on it's own).There is no possessive noun in the noun clause, "the banana belonging to the chimp".The possessive form is, "the chimp's banana", a noun phrase (any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun, without a verb, that can function in a sentence as a subject or an object).
Yes, a pronoun is a word that can be used in place of a noun to avoid repetition in a sentence. It refers to a noun that has already been mentioned or is known to the listener.
A pronoun (he, she, it, him, her, we, us, etc.) can substitute for a noun in a sentence.
The pronoun is you.
The pronouns in the sentence are it and nobody.The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun.The pronoun 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun.
The word him is the pronoun in the sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence is "it," which is referring to the noun that was previously mentioned.
In the sentence, 'It will work for all kinds of plants.', the pronoun it is the subjective case, subject of the sentence; the third person, singular, neuter pronoun.
Words that can be substituted for the pronoun 'there', depending on context, are:in that placein that positionat that placeat that positionto that placeto that position
Yes, the subject pronoun is "You".
The pronoun in the sentence is it.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'story'.
The first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun "I" is used twice in the sentence.
A noun clause and a noun phrase function as nouns in a sentence. A pronoun is a substitute for a noun.