Indeed, you are correct! People are referred to with the pronoun who and things which are referred to with the pronoun that.The girls who arrived last wore coats that were new.
There is no problem with the pronoun 'she', if the person referred to is a female.
Ed, did YOU find the key the word "you" is a pronoun the word that the pronoun replaces,"Ed" is referred to as the antecedent.
The antecedent is what the pronoun points to. Example: Greg is good at English but he is bad at math. "He" is the pronoun and points to greg. With out the antecedent the reader would not know who is being referred to.
A pronoun that clarifies or renames a noun is called a demonstrative pronoun. Demonstrative pronouns include words like "this," "that," "these," and "those" that help specify or point out which noun is being referred to.
The noun that a pronoun replaces is called the antecedent.Example: When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. ("George" is the antecedent of the pronoun "he.")
Yes, it is called the antecedent.It's the noun from earlier that the pronoun refers to.For example:John said that he liked hot dogs.John is the antecedent of he.
No, it is more correctly referred to as a possessive adjective (precedes nouns).The possessive pronoun is "your" (some sources refer to 'your' as an absolute possessive pronoun because it can stand alone).
The indefinite pronoun is each, a word that takes the place of the nouns for the names of the individual girls referred to.
A demonstrative pronoun clearly shows what is being referred to. Examples of demonstrative pronouns include "this," "that," "these," and "those." These pronouns help to indicate the proximity of the noun they are referring to.
"His" is the possessive pronoun in the sentence.
It is a pronoun used to denote a nonhuman entity or inanimate object of which the name has been previously referred or is unknownIts is the possessive form of this pronoun.It's (with the apostrophe) is the contraction of it is or it has.