The pronoun 'everyone' is an indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentence.
The indefinite pronoun 'everyone' takes the place of the unknown or unnamed nouns (names) for all who heard.
The antecedent for the relative pronoun 'who' is the indefinite pronoun 'everyone', the subject of the sentence.
The relative pronoun is 'who', introducing the relative clause 'who herd the news' (relating to and giving more information about the subject antecedent 'everyone').
The antecedent for the relative pronoun 'who' is the indefinite pronoun everyone.
The relative pronoun is 'who'. The antecedent is everyone.
The relative clause 'who heard the news' is describing the indefinite pronoun 'everyone'.
indefinite
The pronouns in the sentence are:everyone, indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentencewho, relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause 'who heard the news'
The noun clause is 'what happened next'. The relative pronoun 'what' is taking the place of a noun; the clause 'what happened next' is the object of the preposition 'at'.
Stunned is a verb (past tense of stun) and an adjective (a stunned expression).
I stunned people with my colorful clothes.
Aghast. Stunned by disbelief.
The pronouns in the sentence are:everyone, indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentencewho, relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause 'who heard the news'
The pronouns in the sentence are:everyone, indefinite pronoun, subject of the sentencewho, relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause 'who heard the news'
The noun clause is 'what happened next'. The relative pronoun 'what' is taking the place of a noun; the clause 'what happened next' is the object of the preposition 'at'.
There is no compound subject.The subjects of the compound sentence are:We, subject of the verb 'were stunned'Mary, subject of the verb 'had made'There is no compound objects. The direct object of the second part of the compound sentence is:cake, object of the verb 'made'The only thing missing from the sentence is the object of the preposition 'for'. The missing pronoun is the first person, plural, objective pronoun that will take the place of the antecedent 'we'.We were stunned to come home and find that Mary had made a beautiful chocolate cake for us.
She was stunned by his response.The officer stunned the suspect with his taser.
The grammatically correct singular pronoun that takes the place of the singular noun 'team' is it.However, the use of a plural pronoun (their) to take the place of the singular noun 'team' is generally accepted.The answer to the question is, yes, for most people, using the pronoun 'their' is correct (Is your teacher one of those?).
Stunned is a verb (past tense of stun) and an adjective (a stunned expression).
I am stunned by your disgusting request!
I stunned people with my colorful clothes.
stunned does not occur in the KJV Bible
I was stunned by the score I got on my test today.
A bunny will not generally get stunned if you take a picture of it with a flash. They may get scared and freeze momentarily, but they are not stunned in the the classic sense.