No, the pronoun she would refer to a third person. She is the person about whom I am speaking to you. I am first, you are second, she is third.
A second year. For instance, a person in their second year of high school or a person in their second year of college
The first person is the person speaking. The second person is the one spoken to. The third person is the one spoken about. The similarity is that they are all persons.
A first person pronoun is used for yourself; a second person pronoun is used for the person you are speaking to; the third person pronoun is used for someone or something else.
"you" is the only second person plural pronoun we use in English. (They go - singular: I - first you (or thou) - second he, she and it - third plural: we - first you - second they - third.)
= If you are running a race and passed the person in second place what place would you be in? = The Answer is 2nd Place The person you passed is now in third place. The person in first place is just in front of you (Because it does not say that you have passed the person in first place) *The answer Can be First Place (as it still fits the need of "passed the person in second place) but it's assumed that you have ONLY passed the person in second place (since the first placer isn't mentioned), and thus, with the reasoning above, puts you into second place.
The pronoun for the second person is you.
Correct, the word you denotes the second person.
Yes, "he" is a third person pronoun, not a second person pronoun.
The pronoun 'this' is the third person, the person or thing spoken about. The first person is the one speaking; the second person is the one spoken to.
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective in the second person point of view (the person spoken to).Example: John, your lunch is ready.
The second person to be US President was John Adams in 1797. The second person to be Vice President was Thomas Jefferson.
Vince mcmahon is the second person in wwe
The second person on Club Penguin is Happy77.
It could be either second person singular or second person plural. In English they are the same.
The compound subject 'he and you' consists of the third person pronoun 'he' and the second person pronoun 'you'.
Dead
The second person on the moon was 'Buzz' Aldrin