The pronoun 'these' is a demonstrative pronoun, a pronoun that indicate relative nearness or distance in time or place. The demonstrative pronouns are this, that, these, and those.
The word 'mom' is not a pronoun, it's a noun; a word for a person. The appropriate pronouns that take the place of the noun 'mom' in a sentence are she as a subject, and her as an object. Example sentence:
My mom made these for me. She often bakes cookies. I'm will call her to thank her.
"These" is a demonstrative pronoun that points out specific things or persons, while "Mom" is a proper noun functioning as a noun.
An objective pronoun is a type of pronoun that is used as the object of a verb, preposition, or infinitive phrase. Objective pronouns include words like "me," "him," "her," "us," and "them" that receive the action of the verb in a sentence.
The pronoun "THESE" is a demonstrative pronoun that appears in all capital letters in the sentence "Which of THESE scarves is the one Mom said she wanted?" Demonstrative pronouns are used to point to specific items or people.
A subject pronoun is a type of pronoun that replaces a noun as the subject of a sentence. Subject pronouns include words like "I," "you," "he," "she," "it," "we," and "they."
No it is not a pronoun.
The word 'me' is a pronoun, not a noun. The pronoun me is the first person, objective, personal pronoun; the word that takes the place of my name (a noun) as the object of a sentence or a preposition. The corresponding first person, subjective pronoun is 'I'. Example:I wore the new dress that my mom made for me.
The word 'mom' is not a pronoun. The word 'mom' is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'mom' are she as a subject, and her as an object in a sentence.Example: Mom made the cake. She bakes a lot. If you like, I can ask her for the recipe.
The pronoun "THESE" is a demonstrative pronoun that appears in all capital letters in the sentence "Which of THESE scarves is the one Mom said she wanted?" Demonstrative pronouns are used to point to specific items or people.
Seashore is a noun, not a pronoun. Pronouns are words that take the place of nouns. Examples of pronouns are him, her, their, it, us, your.
The interrogative pronoun is which.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question:"Which of these vases is the one mom said she wanted?"The word which is also a relative pronoun, a word that introduces a relative clause:"This is the vase which mom said she wanted."
The pronoun 'he' is a subject pronoun.The pronoun 'him' is an object pronoun.The pronouns 'he' and 'him' are third person, singular, personal pronouns, words that take the place of a singular noun (or name) for a specific male.Examples:Jack got an A on his test. He couldn't wait to show his mom. (subject of the second sentence)Jack's mom said that she was proud of him. (object of the preposition 'of')
The pronoun 'we' is a subject pronoun; the corresponding object pronoun is 'us'. Example sentence.We can have these cookies because mom made them for us.
A demonstrative pronoun is not considered a pronoun when it is used as an adjective to modify a noun rather than taking the place of a noun in a sentence. For example, in the phrase "this book is mine," "this" is a demonstrative adjective modifying the noun "book."
The interrogative pronoun is 'which', forming the question and taking the place of the noun that is the answer to the question.Which of these is the one Mom said she wanted?Mom wanted the vanilla.
After - preposition she - pronoun cleaned - verb the - article room - noun your - pronoun mom - noun asked - verb you - pronoun if - conjunction you - pronoun would - verb move - verb the - article furniture - noun and - conjunction take - verb out - adverb the - article trash - noun
The type of pronoun that comes right after the verb is an object pronoun.
a nominative pronoun.
The corresponding objective first person pronoun is me.My mom loves me.