We say there is bread and milk. No pronoun is required.
How much sugar. Sugar is an uncountable noun. Uncountable refers to nouns that we we cannot easilt think of as consisting of separate items eg liquids powders and for uncountable nouns we use much when asking questions: How much rice do you eat each day Apple which is a countable noun uses many. How many apples did you eat today
The word 'poor' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun 'poor' is a plural, uncountable noun; a word for people of little means in general.Examples:We collected food items to feed the poor. (noun)We collected food items to feed poor people. (adjective)
The word "some" can be an adjective (some items, some people). It can be used as a pronoun, and more rarely as an adverb describing an adjective.
Stationery is considered a mass noun, which means it is typically uncountable. However, in certain contexts, it can be used as a countable noun when referring to individual items of stationery, such as pens, pencils, or notebooks. So, while stationery is generally uncountable, it can be treated as countable depending on how it is being referenced in a sentence.
It is already stated in the question, which is items.
"Bread" is typically considered an uncountable noun when referring to it in general terms, as it represents a substance rather than individual items. However, when referring to specific types or loaves of bread, it can be used as a countable noun (e.g., "three loaves of bread"). The context determines whether it is countable or uncountable.
"Clothes" is typically considered uncountable, as it refers to a general category of clothing items. However, you can use the plural form "pieces of clothing" to refer to individual items.
It is a noun.
bread wraps and plates
needs
The word "these" is a pronoun that is used to refer to multiple items or things that are nearby or within reach. It is used to indicate something in close proximity or to point out a specific group of things. For example, "These are my books" or "What are these?"
"After the yard sale Debra and Elaine took their leftover items to a charitable organization."The pronoun in the sentence is 'their', a possessive adjective, a word that is placed before a noun to indicate that noun belongs to someone or something.The pronoun 'their' is the third person, plural form.The antecedent of the pronoun 'their' is 'Debra and Elaine'.
No, it is an adjective (plural of this) or a pronoun (restating a plural noun).
No. With things that may be counted we use "fewer."
The pronoun is 'each', an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for every one of two or more people or things (item), seen separately.
"Clothes" is a plural noun and is considered countable. It refers to individual items such as shirts, pants, dresses, etc.
The word is an adjective, adverb, conjunction and a pronoun. Technically it refers to two items or people so is a "dual pronoun" when used thus. Otherwise, it is not a plural.