No, not usually. Many religions capitalize pronouns associated with their God, to show that He (it is usually a male pronoun) is the only one who is worshiped. Some religions also extend this respect to figures who are considered divine, like Jesus (not everyone agrees on this, however). But biblical characters like Moses or Jeremiah or Deborah or Paul are treated the same as any ordinary historical figure-- the pronouns referring to them are not capitalized. The same is true for the character of the Devil or Satan.
Allnames of devils are capitalized.
Examples: Devils, Lucifer, Sata
n, Father of Lies,...
Pronouns that refer mostly to people are called personal pronouns. Some personal pronouns include I, me, you, him, her, she, them, he, and they.
Demonstrative pronouns usually refer to objects rather than people.
neuter
Predicative possessive pronouns are those who are used without the noun and instead of the noun to which they refer : Whose coat is this ? It is mine (my coat).
Pronouns are not describing words. Pronouns stand in place nouns which are words for a person, place, or thing.Adjectives are words that describe nouns. The groups of pronoun adjectives are:PERSONAL PRONOUN, my, your, his, her, their, its.DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS, this, that, these, those, the former, etc.DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS, each, either, none, neither, etc.NUMERAL PRONOUNS, some, any, few, many, none, all, etc.
Yes, you do. That is right; the normal spelling convention is to capitalize all pronouns that refer to God, which includes the pronoun thee, if you are addressing God. Nearer, my God, to Thee.
Pronouns that refer mostly to people are called personal pronouns. Some personal pronouns include I, me, you, him, her, she, them, he, and they.
No.
Yes, you should capitalize "Our" if it is the first word in a title.
Demonstrative pronouns usually refer to objects rather than people.
The two relative pronouns that refer to things are whichand that.The station which is closer to my work is at Main and Cross Streets.The car that hit the mailbox was the black one.
The two pronouns in the sentence are "your" and "he."
Demonstrative pronouns typically refer to objects or things, such as "this," "that," "these," and "those," to point out or identify them. They do not generally refer to people or concepts.
The indefinite pronouns do not have an obvious/definite antecedent that they refer back to.Indefinite pronouns are used in place of nouns for people, things, or amounts that are unknown or unnamed.
The two kinds of indefinite pronouns are indefinite pronouns that refer to people, such as "someone" or "anyone," and indefinite pronouns that refer to things, such as "something" or "anything."
Some special kinds of pronouns include reflexive pronouns (e.g. myself, yourself) which reflect back to the subject of the sentence, intensive pronouns (e.g. myself, himself) which emphasize the noun or pronoun they refer to, interrogative pronouns (e.g. who, what) which are used to ask questions, and demonstrative pronouns (e.g. this, that) which point out or refer to specific things.
neuter