The antecedent for the relative pronoun "who" is "everyone." In this sentence, "everyone" is the noun that the relative pronoun refers back to, indicating that all the people who heard the news were stunned.
The pronouns in the sentence are:everyone, indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentencewho, relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause 'who heard the news'
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.
Past tense of stun is stunned, as in, "That terrible news stunned me."
They did not hear of it that early, but everyone who heard the news reacted with disbelief, as no one thought it possible.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
Nowadays, news organizations used social media to deliver news and information faster and more accessible by the public. For instance on Bin Laden's death social media enables a worldwide discussion joined by anyone and everyone from politicians to movie stars and those at Ground Zero celebrations to those sitting at home on the couch. Everyone can participate and everyone's voice is heard.
"That's yesterday's news..." uses 'yesterday' to qualify the pronoun 'news'.
arnold heard the news through the scratchy old radio
"News" is an uncountable noun. It refers to information about recent events or developments and is generally used without an article such as "a" or "the." For example, you would say "I heard some news" instead of "I heard a news."
Radio