The pronoun 'them' is the indirect object of the sentence.
"In the sentence below, identify the pronoun and its antecedent?"In this sentence the pronoun is its.The antecedent for the possessive adjective its is the noun pronoun.
Although not underlined, the only pronoun in the sentence is: ourThe pronoun 'our' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The pronoun 'our' is a first person, plural pronoun that describes a noun as belonging to the speaker and one or more other people.
Personal
A word that describes a noun or pronoun is an ADJECTIVE.
The adjectives in the sentence are:injuredthisyour (pronoun, a possessive adjective)her (pronoun, a possessive adjective)
"In the sentence below, identify the pronoun and its antecedent?"In this sentence the pronoun is its.The antecedent for the possessive adjective its is the noun pronoun.
Although not underlined, the only pronoun in the sentence is: ourThe pronoun 'our' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The pronoun 'our' is a first person, plural pronoun that describes a noun as belonging to the speaker and one or more other people.
Personal
The word I is a personal pronoun, the first person singular, and it is the subject of this sentence.
Interrogative.
The pronoun shows gender bias -Apex
A word that describes a noun or pronoun is an ADJECTIVE.
The adjectives in the sentence are:injuredthisyour (pronoun, a possessive adjective)her (pronoun, a possessive adjective)
The antecedent of the underlined pronoun "them" is "the children."
'I' is the subjective case, 'me' is the objective case, - and 'my' is the possessivecase.Here is an example sentence of four clauses. In each clause the subjective case pronoun is used first and the underlined objective case pronoun is used last:-"I wrote to her, she wrote to them, they wrote to him, and he wrote to me."
Type your answer here... The pronoun does not agree with its antecedent in number.
The pronoun does not agree with its antecedent in number.