The word "some" in the sentence "Some of the students arrived late to class" is an indefinite pronoun. It does not refer to any specific students, but rather to an unspecified group.
The indefinite pronouns that can be used in the sentence are "someone," "anybody," "everyone," or "no one." Each of these pronouns refers to an unspecified person.
Indefinite in grammar refers to words that do not specify a particular person, thing, or amount. Examples include "some," "any," and "many." Indefinite pronouns do not refer to a specific noun in a sentence.
The two kinds of indefinite pronouns are indefinite pronouns that refer to people, such as "someone" or "anyone," and indefinite pronouns that refer to things, such as "something" or "anything."
Indefinite pronouns can be singular, plural, or singular/plural depending on the context. Examples of singular indefinite pronouns include "anyone," "everyone," and "something." Plural indefinite pronouns include "both," "many," and "several." Some indefinite pronouns, like "all," "some," and "none," can be either singular or plural depending on the context.
The singular indefinite pronouns are:anotheranybody, anyone, anythingeacheitherenougheverybody, everyone, everythinglesslittlemuchneithernobody, no one, nothingoneothersomebody, someone, somethingyou (unspecified person, someone in general)The plural indefinite pronouns are:bothfew, fewermanyothersseveralthey (people in general)The indefinite pronouns that can be singular or plural:allanymoremostnonesomesuch
The indefinite pronouns that can be used in the sentence are "someone," "anybody," "everyone," or "no one." Each of these pronouns refers to an unspecified person.
The pronouns in your sentence are:what, an interrogative pronoun which introduces the question;all, an indefinite pronoun which takes the place of an unspecified number (of pronouns in this sentence).
Indefinite in grammar refers to words that do not specify a particular person, thing, or amount. Examples include "some," "any," and "many." Indefinite pronouns do not refer to a specific noun in a sentence.
The pronouns in the sentence are:this, a demonstrative pronoun (subject of the sentence)that, a relative pronoun (introduces the relative clause 'everyone needs')everyone, an indefinite pronoun (subject of the relative clause)
Yes, there are singular indefinite pronouns and plural indefinite pronouns.There are also indefinite pronouns that function as singular or plural.The singular indefinite pronouns are:anotheranybody, anyone, anythingeacheitherenougheverybody, everyone, everythinglesslittlemuchneithernobody, no one, nothingoneothersomebody, someone, somethingyou (an unidentified person)The plural indefinite pronouns are:bothfew, fewermanyothersseveralthey (people in general)The indefinite pronouns that can be used as singular or plural:allanymoremostnonesomesuch (as 'and the like')
The two kinds of indefinite pronouns are indefinite pronouns that refer to people, such as "someone" or "anyone," and indefinite pronouns that refer to things, such as "something" or "anything."
Inverted words: Interrogative sentences. Unclear pronouns: Indefinite pronouns Variable spelling: some nouns have alternate spelling
There are no vague (indefinite) pronouns in the sentence. There is only one pronoun in the sentence, it, which is a personal pronoun, representing the noun antecedent car.
Personal pronouns are words that take the place of nouns for (person, place, thing); the personal pronouns are I, we, you, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them. Indefinite pronouns take the place of someone or something indefinite; an indefinite pronoun does not refer to any specific person, thing or amount. Examples of indefinite pronouns are another, any, anybody, anyone, anything, each, either, everybody, everyone, everything, neither, nobody, no one, nothing, somebody, someone, something, etc.
The pronouns are: all = indefinite pronoun us = plural, objective personal pronoun anyone = indefinite pronoun you = singular, subjective, personal pronoun
Indefinite pronouns can be singular, plural, or singular/plural depending on the context. Examples of singular indefinite pronouns include "anyone," "everyone," and "something." Plural indefinite pronouns include "both," "many," and "several." Some indefinite pronouns, like "all," "some," and "none," can be either singular or plural depending on the context.
Six indefinite pronouns (a pronoun that doesn't specify person, thing, or amount) are:allanothereachfewmanynone