No, excited is a verb (excite, excites, excited, exciting), the 'action' word in a sentence.
Excited can also be an adjective. Example use: The excited child ran to greet her father.
The noun form is exicitedness. The pronoun that is used for excitedness is 'it'. Example use: Her excitedness showed on her face and it caused her to dance around the room.
The word 'them' is a plural, objective, personal pronoun. The pronoun 'them' is the direct object of the verb 'see'.
The word they is a personal pronoun for the third person, plural, subjective case. The pronoun they is also an indefinite pronoun when used for people in general, for example, 'They say...'.PronounEx.People tend to raise their voices when they get excited.
No. You can be excited about, or excited at, but not excited in. For example, you are excited about the opportunity of joining....
No, the word "pronoun" is a noun, a word for a part of speech; a word for a thing.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'pronoun' is it.Example: A pronoun is a part of speech. It takes the place of a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
Pronoun, more specifically the first person plural personal pronoun.
The word 'them' is a plural, objective, personal pronoun. The pronoun 'them' is the direct object of the verb 'see'.
The word they is a personal pronoun for the third person, plural, subjective case. The pronoun they is also an indefinite pronoun when used for people in general, for example, 'They say...'.PronounEx.People tend to raise their voices when they get excited.
The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'children' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Example: The children are visiting the candy factory today. They seem excited. It should be fun for them.
It is doubly excited if it is sparately excited dc motor, singly excited if it is self excited machine
The pronoun it can function as a subject or an object:Where is the pie?subject: It is on the kitchen counter.object: Have you tasted it?
"Both them and us were excited" is not correct usage. Look at how the pronouns would be used separately, then combine them in one, correct sentence. You would say "They were excited" not "Them were excited." Similarly, you would say "We were excited," not "Us were excited." The correct combination would be: "We and they were excited."
The pronoun 'them' is a personal pronoun, the third person plural pronoun.
subject pronoun
No. You can be excited about, or excited at, but not excited in. For example, you are excited about the opportunity of joining....
These are the eight types of pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we you, and they
The word 'who' is a pronoun, an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun. The pronoun 'who' is the best pronoun for who. Examples:Who is your new math teacher? He is the one whotaught algebra last year.
No, the word "pronoun" is a noun, a word for a part of speech; a word for a thing.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'pronoun' is it.Example: A pronoun is a part of speech. It takes the place of a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.