There are two pronouns in the sentence:
When he had eaten all of the cookies, everyone was angry that there weren't any left for them.
Jeffery smiled ruefully at the empty plate that was until recently filled with the cookies he shouldn't have eaten.
Yes, the verb in the sentence is 'love'.'you' is a pronoun, subject of the sentence;'eating' is a noun (gerund), the direct object of the verb.
Percent eaten = ( 20 / 50 ) ( 100 ) = 40%
The record for the most cookies eaten in a single minute is 19 and was achieved by Dominic Oakes in 2018.
"I" is a subject pronoun used when the person is the subject of a sentence or clause. "Me" is an object pronoun used when the person is the object of a verb or preposition. For example, "I love you" uses "I" as the subject, while "You love me" uses "me" as the object.
"He" is a nominative Pronoun (Subjective) and "Him" is accussative pronoun (Objective) so subject always comes before verb and object always comes after verb. Thus He is used as the subject of the sentence and him is used as the object of the sentence. He is eating an apple. (He-Subject) An apple is eaten by him. (Him- Object)
No, the word 'eaten' is a verb, the past participle, past tense of the verb to eat (eat, eats, eating, eaten), a word for an action. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective to describe a noun (the eaten portion).The noun forms for the verb 'eat' are eater, the gerund, eating, and eats (another word for food, 'having some good eats').A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
6
No, the word 'lunch' is a noun and a verb.The noun 'lunch' is a word for a meal eaten in the middle of a day.The verb to 'lunch' means to eat a meal in the middle of a day.Examples:Our lunch is ready. (noun, subject of the sentence)She likes to lunch at the cafe around the corner. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: They served lunch at the meeting. It was soup and sandwiches. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'lunch' in the second sentence)
Come now. -- The package had 36 cookies in it when it was full. -- Then 10 cookies were eaten. That's 10/36 of the package. -- There are 26 cookies left. That's 26/36 of the package. The simplification of both fractions is left as an exercise for the student.
The internet and time are the villains against me now. Sauron and Darth Vader are great villains. They've eaten all my cookies, those little villains.