The pronouns 'many' and 'few' are indefinite pronouns, words that take the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number or amount.
Examples:
Many of our members volunteer for community projects.
The few who are unable to work on these projects, donate materials.
Note: The words 'many' and 'few' are adjectives when placed before a noun to describe that noun.
Example: Many members volunteer for community projects. A few members donate materials.
There is no type of pronoun called 'special pronoun' in English.
Yes, a subjective pronoun is a type of personal pronoun. A personal pronoun replaces the names of people + things. Subjective and Objective pronoun both belongs in the personal pronoun category.
There is no type of pronoun called 'special pronoun' in English.
It is a pronoun.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a noun, pronoun, or adjective.
The pronoun 'few' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number of people or things.Example: We don't have many responses but there are a few.The word 'few' also functions as a noun and an adjective.The noun 'few' is a word for a minority of people (usually stated as 'the few').The adjective 'few' is a word placed before a noun to describe that noun (few people, few words).
The pronoun 'few' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed small number of people or things.The word 'few' is also an adjective (or determiner) when placed before a noun to describe that noun. The adjective 'few' is the positive form: few, fewer, fewest.Examples:The tickets sold out but a few were set aside for guests. (pronoun)We sold out but a few tickets were set aside for guests. (adjective)
The pronoun itself is called a reflexive pronoun.
The type of pronoun that comes right after the verb is an object pronoun.
a nominative pronoun.
The pronoun 'its' is a possessive, singular, neuter pronoun.
The pronoun is 'few', an indefinite pronoun that is taking the place of the unnamed actual number (a noun) of biographies.
The indefinite pronoun 'few' takes the place of a noun for a small amount or number of people or things. The pronoun 'few' takes a verb for the plural:Those muffins were very popular, few are left for the lunch crowd.Few have the skills to qualify.She had many offers but few were well paid.
There is no type of pronoun called 'special pronoun' in English.
The pronoun in italics is a personal pronoun.
The pronoun is few, an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number of people.The indefinite pronoun 'few' is the plural subject of the sentence (a few really like).The word 'few' also functions as an adjective when placed before a noun to describe that noun: "I'm going skating with a few friends."
Myself is a reflexive pronoun.