The object pronoun is her, object of the preposition 'to'.
Using an object pronoun, the sentence would be:'The game wardens noticed it.'
Her is the only pronoun in that sentence, and it is not plural. The personal pronoun her is singular, one person.
The pronoun in the sentence is you, a word that takes the place of the noun (name) for the person spoken to.The pronoun 'you' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person.
The correct choice would be "Gary and I." When deciding between "I" and "me," it's important to consider the role of the pronoun in the sentence. In this case, "Gary and I" is the subject of the sentence, so the subjective pronoun "I" is appropriate. "Me" is used when the pronoun is the object of the sentence.
A pronoun case error occurs when a subjective pronoun is used as an object; or an objective pronoun is used as a subject in a sentence.Example: I sent the email to she. (the pronoun 'she' is a subject pronoun used as the object of the preposition 'to')
The sentence has two direct objects. direct object - the game indirect object - your team
Game is the direct object.
The sentence 'Tim invited you to a soccer game' is neither an indirect object nor a direct object. It is a sentence. It CONTAINS an indirect object ('a soccer game') and a direct object ('you'). It also contains a subject ('Tim'), a verb ('invited'), and a preposition ('to').
The question should be: Are the words she and him nouns or verbs? Definitely not. They are pronouns. She = subject pronoun; him = object pronoun
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.
An antecedent is the noun or pronoun that a pronoun replaces.In the example sentence, the indefinite pronoun anybody is the antecedent of the indefinite pronoun they.Note: When the pronoun 'they' is used to represent people in general, it is an indefinite pronoun. When the pronoun 'they' takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns for specific people or things, it is a personal pronoun.
There are two nouns, track and game. (The contraction Let's includes a pronoun, us.)