The pronoun for Tomas is 'he' as a subject and 'him' as an object of a sentence or clause.
The pronoun for Susan is 'she' as a subject and 'her' as an object of a sentence or clause.
The pronoun for Tomas and Susan is 'they' as a subject and 'them' as an object of a sentence or clause.
Examples:
Tomas is a teacher. He teaches math at the high school. I met him at a teachers' conference.
Susan is a teacher. She teaches math at the high school. I met her at a teachers' conference.
Tomas and Susan are teachers. They teach math at the high school. I met them at a teachers' conference.
The pronoun for lizard is 'it'. The pronoun for the plural, lizards, is 'they' for the subject and 'them' as an object of a sentence or clause.
Examples:
I saw a lizard, it ran under your chair.
She loved the lizards at the zoo. They mesmerized her and she wants to go see them again.
Cute is an adjective. A pronoun are words like he, she, it, her, him, they, and them.
lizard
"I" is a pronoun, "like" is a verb, and "you" is a pronoun.
The words this and that are demonstrative pronouns.The word one is an indefinite pronoun.The word you is a personal pronoun.
Segregate is a verb. It doesn't have a pronoun. Pronouns are words like I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they, that, those. Words that can stand instead of a noun. The noun from segregate is segregation; the pronoun for segregation is it.
Sample lizard on the timber bench
This'll is neither. It is a contraction of the words this and will. This is a pronoun and will is a verb.
The word or words that a pronoun replaces is its antecedent.Example: When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. ("George" is the antecedent of the pronoun "he.")
Read to me
komodo dragon
A case featuring pronouns like "he," "they," and "you" may involve issues related to gender identity, personal relationships, or communication dynamics. The use of these pronouns can impact how individuals perceive their identities and how they are addressed in various settings. Respecting individuals' preferred pronouns is important for creating an inclusive and respectful environment.
The words 'who' and 'me' are not nouns, they are pronouns. Pronouns are words that take the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun 'who' is an interrogative pronoun (a pronoun that asks a question) or a relative pronoun (introduces a relative clause). The pronoun 'me' is a personal pronoun which takes the place of the noun for first person (the speaker) as the object of a sentence or clause. The first person subject personal pronoun is 'I'.