The pronoun 'those' is a demonstrative pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun and indicates near or far in place or time.
The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.
Example: Those are mother's favorite flowers.
A demonstrative pronoun also functions as an adjectivewhen placed before a noun to describe that noun.
Example: Those flowers are mother's favorite.
Those is a demonstrative pronoun, along with this, that, these, and such.
The word "those" is a demonstrative pronoun, not a noun. It is used to point out specific things or people in a conversation.
The word that (plural those) is a demonstrative pronoun. The pronouns for item close by, rather than at a distance, are this and these.
Interrogative pronoun
'than' is not a pronoun.
"Those'll" is a contraction of "those will," and in this case, "those" is a pronoun.
The difference between "them" and "those" is that 'them' is an objective pronoun whereas 'those' is a demonstrative pronoun.
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
You can use a demonstrative pronoun and say "Those" or "These"
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
"Of" is not a pronoun. He, she, it, they, them, are all pronouns. "Of" is a preposition.
No, those is not a personal pronoun. Those is a demonstrative pronoun.The demonstrative pronouns are this, that, these, and those.Example sentence: Those are the best cookies.