Yes, in that sentence the word 'all' is an indefinite pronoun and the subject of the sentence. The pronoun 'all' is taking the place of a noun for a specific number of tables.
The word 'all' also functions as an adjective when placed before the noun: All guests with children will be seated first.
Yes, 'all' is an indefinite pronoun when used as an indefinite amount or things such as 'All is forgiven.' or 'All I want...'. But 'all' is a noun when it is used for a total of everything such as 'All of the world...' or All of the people...'.
The word 'all' is also an adverb, modifying a verb (It was all painted white.) or an adjective (Use an all purpose cleaner...), and an adjective (It removed all doubt...) that describes a noun .
The personal pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'posters' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Example: Posters covered his dorm room. They were all science related. Some of them were actually charts and tables.
Which word correctly completes the following sentence? "____ the book on the table." 1.set2. sat
Algebra is a subject most students learn, then never use again, because they don't see the many ways it can be used. Some of the world's greatest mathematicians did not use algebra. Algebra, for some, is like trying to learn multiplication tables for the alphabet.
no not like that like a sentence that has the word example in it like. 1x2 is an example of ur time tables
She spent the afternoon weeding and tending her garden. He earns tips tending bar and waiting on tables.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. ('George' is a noun for a person; the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'George' as the subject of the second part of the sentence)Our picnic at the park was nice. It has picnic tables and grills for public use. ('park' is a noun for a place; the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'park' in the second sentence)The kittens are only a week old. I will let you know when they are weaned. ('kittens' is a plural noun for things; the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'kittens' in the second part of the sentence)
T. E. Hayward has written: 'On local life-tables by abbreviated or \\' -- subject(s): Tables, Mortality 'On life tables' -- subject(s): Tables, Mortality 'Notes on life-tables' -- subject(s): Tables, Mortality 'A new life-table for England and Wales' -- subject(s): Tables, Mortality
All the tables and chairs were stacked in the corner of the room. The data was presented in tables.
Henry Louis has written: 'Traverse tables with an introductory chapter on co-ordinate surveying' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Tables, Surveying 'Metallurgy of tin' -- subject(s): Metallurgy, Tin 'Traverse tables' -- subject(s): Surveying, Tables, Traverse-tables 'The preparation of coal for the market' -- subject(s): Coal preparation
The personal pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'posters' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Example: Posters covered his dorm room. They were all science related. Some of them were actually charts and tables.
This week I learned my 4,5 and 6 times tables.
You can determine if a subject is singular or plural by looking at the verb that follows it. If the verb is singular, the subject is singular; if the verb is plural, the subject is plural. Additionally, singular subjects are typically accompanied by singular pronouns like "he," "she," "it," while plural subjects are accompanied by pronouns like "they," "we," "you."
Some of the tables we liked were quadrilaterals.
Cuneiform was the earliest form of writing used by ancient civilizations in Mesopotamia, where wedge-shaped characters were pressed onto clay tablets.
Number the banquet tables in sequential order so people can be assigned to sit at the tables.
Arthur Fessenden has written: 'Tables, shewing the interest at six per cent' 'Tables, shewing the interest at six per cent' 'Tables, shewing the value in Halifax currency of any sum of exchange on London, from 1s. to 1,000 pounds sterling, in a progressive series of one quarter per centum' -- subject(s): Money, Tables, History 'Tables of exchange on London' -- subject(s): Money, Tables, Foreign exchange, Monnaie, Change 'Tables, shewing the interest' -- subject(s): Interest and usury, Tables
J. Peters has written: 'Eight-place tables of trigonometric functions' -- subject(s): Tables, Trigonometry 'Eight-place tables of trigonometric functions for every second of arc, with an appendix on the computation to twenty places' -- subject(s): Tables, Trigonometry