The pronoun 'who' is an interrogative pronoun which introduces a question:
The pronoun 'who' is a relative pronoun which introduces a relative clause:
The indefinite pronoun is anyone, a word for any person of those spoken to.The antecedent of the relative pronoun 'who' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the possessive adjective 'their' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the personal pronoun 'it' is the noun copy.The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' has no antecedent in the sentence.
"They" is a personal pronoun used to refer to a group of people or things. It is not a reflexive, intensive, demonstrative, interrogative, relative, or indefinite pronoun.
These are the eight types of pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we you, and they
The antecedent of the relative pronoun 'who' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the possessive adjective 'their' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the personal pronoun 'it' is the noun copy.The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' has no antecedent. The pronoun 'anyone' is a word for any person of those spoken to.
The possessive form for the indefinite pronoun "nobody" is "nobody's."
The pronoun 'everyone' is an indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentence.The indefinite pronoun 'everyone' takes the place of the unknown or unnamed nouns (names) for all who heard.
"After she examined my eyes, she took out two contact lenses and gave them to me saying that one was for my right eye and the other was for my left."The pronouns in the sentence are:she, personal pronoun, subject of the first part of the compound sentence;my, possessive adjective, describes the noun 'eyes';she, personal pronoun, subject of the second part of the compound sentence;them, personal pronoun, direct object of the verb 'gave';me, personal pronoun, object of the preposition 'to';that, relative pronoun, introduces the compound relative clause;one, indefinite pronoun, subject of the first part of the compound relative clause;my, possessive adjective, describes the noun phrase 'right eye';other, indefinite pronoun, subject of the second part of the compound relative clause;my, possessive adjective, describes the noun 'left'.
The antecedent for the relative pronoun 'who' is everyone, an indefinite pronoun.
The only possessive relative pronoun in English is "whose."
The word 'which' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'which' is a relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.Adjectives do not have a possessive form.
Yes. Pronouns are just a substitution of a noun.Only singular indefinite pronouns have a possessive form, e.g.He is somebody's sonIt is everybody's problemIt is no one's fault
The indefinite pronoun 'neither' does not have a possessive form.