Any singular noun not ending in 's', any plural noun not ending in 's', and any third person pronoun not ending in 's'. Examples:
John is coming for dinner. (John is a singular, third person, proper noun; dinner is a singular, third person, common noun.)
The women raised a lot of money. (Women is a plural, third person, common noun; money is an uncountable, third person, common, noun.)
They went to Miami on vacation. (They is a plural, third person, personal pronoun; Miami is a singular, third person, proper noun; vacation is a singular, third person, common noun.)
desands (3rd person sing. meaning clean from sand).
Third person is he, she, it, they, him, her, them.
3rd
can
That person is in 3rd grade
Need takes an -s in the 3rd person singular ( eg she needs) , and -ed for the past in all persons and numbers (we needed, and we have needed).
it means like to put to make the word plural or to write as a 3rd person view like speaks
The root word for "impersonal" is "personal." "Impersonal" is formed by adding the prefix "im-" to "personal" to indicate the negation or absence of personal characteristics.
Πέθανε [pEthane] (past, 3rd person)
pester
assault
The -s in the 3rd person singular form in English verbs indicates subject-verb agreement. It helps to distinguish the singular form from plural forms of the verb.