The pronoun 'what' is an interrogative pronoun (introduces a question) and a relative pronoun (introduces a relative clause); for example:
Question: What is your name?
Relative clause: You can do what you want.
The word 'what' is also and adjective: What movie did you see?
The word 'what' is an interjection: What! That's a lot of money.
The pronoun "what" is used in a sentence to ask about something specific or to refer to an unidentified object or situation. It is often used to introduce a question or to gather information about an unknown subject.
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.
The subject pronoun is typically found at the beginning of a sentence, before the verb. It is used to indicate who or what is performing the action of the verb. For example, in the sentence "She is reading a book," "she" is the subject pronoun.
We is a subject pronoun, it is used as the subject of a sentence or clause. The object pronoun is us, used as the object of the verb or a preposition.Examples:We can go to the movies.Mother called us.
No, "that" is a pronoun in the sentence "Where did you get that." It is functioning as the object of the verb "get."
A subject pronoun functions as the subject of a sentence or the subject of a clause. Examples:They came for dinner.We had the wine they brought.
Subjective pronouns are used to identify the subject of a sentence or clause. They include words like "I," "he," "she," and "they." These pronouns replace nouns to make sentences more concise and to avoid repetition.
The pronouns in the sentence are it and nobody.The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun.The pronoun 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun.
The subject pronoun is typically found at the beginning of a sentence, before the verb. It is used to indicate who or what is performing the action of the verb. For example, in the sentence "She is reading a book," "she" is the subject pronoun.
There is no pronoun used as an object. The pronoun 'you' is used twice in the sentence. The pronoun 'you' can be a subject or an object pronoun. The first 'you' is the subject pronoun, the subject of the sentence. The second 'you' is the subject of the noun clause 'what you expected to see'; the clause is the object of the sentence but the word you is the subject of that clause.
The pronoun in the sentence is "you," used as the subject pronoun.
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.
No, the pronoun 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun used to 'reflect back' to the subject in a sentence. Example: Dad made himself some breakfast. The pronoun 'himself' is also a intensive pronoun used to emphasize its noun antecedent. Example: Dad himself made breakfast. Even when the pronoun is the first word in a sentence, it is not the subject of the sentence. Example: Himself a cook, dad always makes breakfast. (reflexive use of the pronoun, the subject of the sentence is 'dad')
No, 'her' is an objective pronoun, used as the object of a sentence or phrase. 'She' is the subjective pronoun, used as the subject of a sentence or phrase. Example uses: Subject: She is my sister. Object: The book belongs to her.
Personal
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."
The only pronoun in the sentence is it, but is used as the object of the preposition around. The pronoun itcan be a subjective or an objective pronoun.
A nominative case (subjective) pronoun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause and as a predicate nominative.