The pronouns that takes the place of two or more people are they as a subject and them as an object. Examples:
All but two of the present day Justices were present. Theywere attending a reception that was given for them.
No, Oxygen is not a pronoun. He, She, Him, Her, It, Its, They, Them, Their, We, Us, and Our are all pronouns.
There are two pronouns in the sentence:all, an indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentence;his, a possessive pronoun, predicate nominative following the linking verb 'are' (books = his).
Yes, the pronoun 'their' is always plural. The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective which, when placed before a noun, shows that the noun belongs to them (two or more people or animals).Example: Mary andJohn have asked for volunteers to help them paint theirhouse.
Yes, 'we' is a pronoun; the first person, plural, subjective, personal pronoun. The pronoun 'we' takes the place of a plural noun (or two or more nouns) for names that are the subject of a sentence or clause.Example: Jack and I can be there at two. We will bring some snacks. (the pronoun 'we' takes the place of the noun phrase 'Jack and I' as the subject of the second sentence)
A divided pronoun reference occurs when there are two or more nouns in a sentence that a pronoun could replace, making it difficult to know which noun the pronoun is replacing.Example:Mary and Susan went to her father's store.Whose father has the store?Clearer would be:Mary went to her father's store with Susan.
The indefinite pronoun all takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number of justices.
The pronoun with two letters is: it
they stay in office for two days.
The pronoun is all, an indefinite pronoun which take the place of the noun for the specific number of students.The word both is also an indefinite pronoun which takes the place of a compound antecedent of two people or things, probably in the sentence before this one.
There are two pronouns in the sentence:all, an indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentence;his, a possessive pronoun, predicate nominative following the linking verb 'are' (books = his).
No, Oxygen is not a pronoun. He, She, Him, Her, It, Its, They, Them, Their, We, Us, and Our are all pronouns.
yes
Two
The personal pronoun 'it' functions as a subjective or objective pronoun. Examples:subject: It is really nice.object: John brought it with him.
The word their is a pronoun called a possessive adjective, a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to two or more people or things.The possessive pronoun form is theirs, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to two or more people or things.Examples:The models all extended their arms to show the jewelry. (possessive adjective)When we captured a bunker, we found all the arms that were theirs. (possessive pronoun)
He is the pronoun for brother; it is the pronoun for joke. The word your is an adjective form of the possessive pronoun 'yours'.
it