The person and number do not indicate gender, the noun antecedent determines gender. For example:
When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. (the noun George indicates use of the male personal pronoun)
Aunt Mary made her lemon cake for the party. (the noun Aunt Mary indicates use of the female adjective pronoun)
The house needs a lot of work, it has a bad roof. (the noun house indicates use of the neuter personal pronoun)
The gender of a pronun is not based on person or number; the gender of the pronoun is based on the antecedent. Examples:
When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. (The gender of the pronoun 'he' is determined by the gender of the antecedent 'George'.)
Gina made cookies for the class. She often bakes treats for class. (The gender of the pronoun 'she' is determined by the antecedent 'Gina'.)
The tree broke in the storm and it hit the car. (The neuter gender pronoun 'it' is determined by the neuter antecedent noun 'tree'.)
Yes, personal pronouns are distinguished by:number, singular or pluralperson, first person, second person, and third persongender, male, female,and neutercase, subjective, objective, or possessive
The term pronoun-antecedent is the term for the agreement of a pronoun with its antecedent. Pronouns and antecedents must agree in number (singular or plural), person (first, second, or third person), and gender (male, female, neutral).
Numeral pronouns are used to indicate the quantity of objects, people, etc that we are talking about in the sentence. We distinguish two types of numeral pronouns: Cardinal and ordinal. Cardinal numeral pronouns tell us just the number of objects, etc. Eg.:I have four books. Well, I have five. (Tengo cuatro libros. Pues, yo tengo cinco)Ordinal numeral pronouns tell us the order they occupy in a series. Eg.:My project is the fourth that it is going to be presented. Mine is the fifth. (Mi proyecto es el cuarto que va a ser presentado. El mío es el quinto)In the first example, the pronoun "five" substitutes the noun "books" and just indicates the number of books that that person possesses. In the second example, the pronoun "fifth" substitutes the noun "project" and indicates the order that "project" has in a series.*Note: numeral pronouns will only be pronouns and not adjectives when a noun that they determine does not follow them.
The number for nouns is singular or plural. Some examples of singular and plural forms:orange, orangesneighbor, neighborstooth, teethknife, knivesman, menThe gender for nouns is the word for a male, a female, a person or thing of either gender (a common gender noun), or a thing that has no gender (a neuter noun). Some examples for nouns indicating gender:man, womanmother, fatheruncle, auntgirl, boyhusband, wifeboar, sowSome examples for nouns with common gender:teacherchildparentfriendworkerhorseSome examples for neuter gender nouns:housestreetlunchquestioneducationcountry
The present tense of "argue" is "argues" when referring to third-person singular pronouns (he, she, it) and "argue" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they). For example, "He argues with his friend about politics." or "I argue for stricter gun control laws."
Pronouns don't change based on tense in French - only number, person and gender.
All pronouns must agree with their antecedent in person, number, and gender. This is called pronoun-antecedent agreement.
Yes, pronouns do indicate person, gender, and number.person, does the pronoun replace a first person, second person, or third person noun;gender, does the pronoun replace a noun for a female, male, or neuter noun;number, does the pronoun replace a singular or plural noun or nouns.Pronouns must also be the correct case. case, is the pronoun used for the subject or the object in the sentence, or is it used to show possession.
A personal pronoun is a word used to take the place of a noun(s) for a specific person or thing.The personal pronouns are: I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.Personal pronouns are determined by person, number, gender, and case.The 'person' of personal pronouns are:the person speaking (first person), I, me, we, us.the person spoken to (second person), you.the person, or thing spoken about (third person) he, she, it, they, him, her, them.The 'number' of personal pronouns are:singular I, me, he, she, him, her, it.plural we, us, they, them.functions as both singular or plural you.The 'gender' of personal pronouns are:words for a male he, him.words for a female she, her.words for something that has no gender (neuter) it.word for a male or female you.words for male, female, or neuter they, them.The 'case' of personal pronouns are:subjective I, we, he, she, they.objective me, us, him, her, them.functions as both subjective or objective you, it.
Yes, personal pronouns are distinguished by:number, singular or pluralperson, first person, second person, and third persongender, male, female,and neutercase, subjective, objective, or possessive
The four characteristics of pronouns and they are:1) person; first person, second person, third person2) number; singular or plural3) gender; male, female, neuter4) case; subjective, objective, possessive
Personal pronouns have a number (singular or plural), a gender (masculine, feminine, or neuter), and a person(fist person, second person, third person).
Pronouns don't have tenses for past, present, or future; verbs are the words with such tenses. Pronouns are distinguished by person (first, second, or third person), number (singular or plural), and gender (male, female, or neuter). The personal pronouns are I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.
Personal pronouns have:number (singular or plural)person (first person, second person, third person)gender (male, female, neuter).case (subjective, objective, possessive)The singular personal pronouns are: I, me, you, he, him, she, her, it.The plural personal pronouns are: we, us, you, they, them.The first person personal pronouns (the person speaking) are: I, me, we, us.The second person personal pronouns (the person spoken to) is: youThe third person personal pronouns (the person/thing spoken about) are: he, him, she, her, it, they, them.The personal pronouns for a male are: he, him.The personal pronouns for a female are: she, her.The neuter personal pronoun is: it.The personal pronouns that can be used for male or female are: I, me, we, us, you.The personal pronouns that can be used for male, female, or neuter are: they, them.
The word dentists is a singular noun, for a person. It would be replaced by the third-person gender-specific pronouns: he or him, or she and her.
Pronouns used in a sentence are determined by their antecedent (the noun that the pronoun is replacing). The antecedent determines the number (singular or plural), the gender (male, female, neuter), and the person (first person, second person, third person). The function of the pronoun in the sentence determines the case (subjective, objective, possessive).
Pronouns (he, she, it) in modern English retain grammatical gender. Other parts of speech, such as nouns and adjectives, do not typically have gender distinctions like in some other languages.