The word 'player' is not a pronoun. The word 'player' is a noun.
The noun 'player' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a person.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'player' are he or she as a subject, and him or heras an object in a sentence.
The active subject is the noun or pronoun that performs the action in a sentence. The passive subject is the noun or pronoun that receives the action in a sentence, rather than performing it.
No, because a pronoun replaces a noun; the word 'pronoun' does not replace a noun, it is a noun.
No, her is not an adverb - it is a possessive adjective (form of a pronoun). The word hers is the possessive pronoun.
No, the word "pronoun" is a noun, a word for a part of speech; a word for a thing.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'pronoun' is it.Example: A pronoun is a part of speech. It takes the place of a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
The singular pronoun in the sentence is which, an interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces a question.The pronoun 'which' takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question, which in this case, is the word 'which'.
The word pronoun includes the word noun.
I assume you are thinking of a sentence like "I massaged myself." with the reflexive pronoun "myself". In a sentence like this the subject and object are the same person, so by putting it into the passive, you make the object the subject. Except that the object is already the subject, so the passive form comes out "I was massaged by myself." It is almost the same. Same thing with third person reflexives. "She poisoned herself" is "She was poisoned by herself" in the passive.
The word our is a pronoun. It means to belong to us.
The word " I " is not a preposition, it is a pronoun.
No, it is not a pronoun.
The word nobody is a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun; a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown person.
Third person personal pronoun, feminine, accusative