The word 'report' is not a pronoun.
The word 'report' is a verb (a word for an action) and a noun (a word for a thing).
Examples:
We will report the problem to the manager. (verb)
I found the error when I reread the report. (noun)
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'report' is it.
Example: Yes, I've read the report and itdoes have an error.
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.
"His" is a possessive pronoun. If you say that something is his object, then he owns that object. He has possessionof it.
It is a pronoun.
The pronoun 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for any unknown or unnamed person.
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 whom is incorrect.The relative pronoun 'whom' is an object pronoun used as the subject of the relative clause. The correct subject pronoun is who."When Montague makes it to the city who will he find?"Example for the object pronoun 'whom':"When Montague makes it to the city to whom should he report?"The pronoun 'whom' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'to' (he should report to whom).
Reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, themselves) Intensive pronouns (myself, himself, herself) Demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those) Interrogative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which) Relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) Indefinite pronouns (everyone, nobody, nothing) Possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers) Reciprocal pronouns (each other, one another) Personal pronouns (I, we, you, he, she) Indefinite pronouns (someone, anybody, everything)
The pronoun in italics is a personal pronoun.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'me' is the noun (name) of the speaker, Sue.The word 'me' is the first person, singular, objective personal pronoun which is functioning as the indirect object of the verb 'will send'.
Myself is a reflexive pronoun.
There is no type of pronoun called 'special pronoun' in English.
The pronoun "He" in the sentence is a personal pronoun, specifically a subject pronoun. It is used to refer to a specific person (in this case, a male) who is the subject of the sentence.
singular
You type a report on paper. But the subject of the report depends entirely on what you want the report to be about.