The word 'children' is not a pronoun. The word 'children' is a noun, the plural form for the noun child.
The plural noun children can function as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:
subject: The children are ready for lunch.
object: We brought lunch for the children.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The subject pronoun for children is 'they'; the object pronoun for children is 'them'. Examples:
subject: The children are ready for lunch. Theyare waiting in the cafeteria.
object: We brought lunch for the children. We will serve them right now.
The word rhinos IS a plural noun. The singular noun is rhino.
The noun children is the plural form of the singular noun child.
No, children is plural; the singular is child.
Singular. "Porpoises" is the pural version of porpoise.
The singular form for the plural noun children is child.
No, the word children is a plural noun. The singular form is child; the singular possessive is child's.
The noun 'dolphin' is singular, a word for one of a type of marine mammal. The plural noun is dolphins.The noun 'children' is plural, a word for two or more young humans. The singular noun is child.
The possessive form for the plural noun children is children's.
The noun phrase 'group of children' is singular, one group.The noun 'children' is the plural form of the singular noun 'child'.The noun phrase 'group of children' is a term form one group of two or more children.
After "no," we use a singular noun. For example, "No child" instead of "No children."
Yes, the word children is the plural form for the singular noun, child. Children is a count noun. Children's is the plural possessive form. The word rights is the plural form for the singular noun, right. Rights is a count noun. Children's rights is the plural form for children's right.
No, the noun body's is the possessive form of the singular noun body.Example: The police have not determined the body's identity.The plural form of the noun body is bodies.