There are two pronouns in the sentence: who and his.
The pronoun in the sentence is "his," which refers to a person who is willing to spend his last dollar for a candy bar.
There are two pronouns in the example sentence: who and his.The pronoun 'who' is functioning as an interrogative pronoun; a word that introduces a question. The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun (or nouns) that answers the question.The pronoun 'his' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to a person (or thing).
No, "I" is a pronoun that is used to refer to oneself.
No, "one" is typically used as a pronoun to refer to an unspecified person. It is considered an indefinite pronoun.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'flute' is it.Example: My flute is new. It was a gift from my father.
The pronoun in the sentence is "What."
There are two pronouns in the example sentence: who and his.The pronoun 'who' is functioning as an interrogative pronoun; a word that introduces a question. The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun (or nouns) that answers the question.The pronoun 'his' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to a person (or thing).
There are a handful of places an individual can get a cheap stock of candy. The list would include Dollar General, Dollar Days, Blair Candy, and Best Buy Candy.
They are sold at many special candy shops, mostly ones that only sell candy. They are not sold at target, or places like that. But the cheapest place to buy them would be a dollar store, like dollar tree. I bought a pack of three for a dollar, vs a local candy store where i bought one pack for $1.10
If a dollar bill were printed in 1977, it would be worth $1.00 right now (in 2008). If a $20 bill were printed in 1977, it would be worth $20.00 right now (in 2008). A candy bar that may have cost $0.05 in 1977 would cost around $0.75 now. But then, a candy bar isn't a dollar.
The word "there'd" is a contraction, a shortened form of "there would" or "there had". The contraction "there'd" is a combination of the pronoun "there" and the verb"would" or "had".The contraction "there'd" functions as a subject and an auxiliary verb in a sentence or a clause.Example:There had been a candy shop in this space before the taco stand.Or, There'd been a candy shop in this space before the taco stand.
You would be spending nine dollars total.
The word "there'd" is a contraction, a shortened form of "there would" or "there had".The contraction "there'd" is a combination of the pronoun"there" and the verb "would" or "had".The contraction "there'd" functions as a subject and an auxiliary verb in a sentence or a clause.Example:There had been a candy shop in this space before the taco stand.Or, There'd been a candy shop in this space before the taco stand.
Assuming that you did not get a cent for every cent you had, the answer is none.
There are 3 Dollar stores - Family Dollar, Dollar General and Dollar Tree and the items they sell would include plates, cups, mops, candy, cleaning supplies such as floor cleaner and breakfast items such as cereal.
No. Gold dimes were never produced US the US mint. Even if they would have been you would never spend it because it would be worth way more than a dollar.
A million minutes...
One dollar could buy lots of things: Soda pop, candy, etc. Almost anything you can get at the dollar tree today you could get in the 80's.