The pronoun in that sentence is "his".
Possessive
big nate strikes again
at the moment there are four big nate books big nate the boy with the biggest head, big nate in a class by himself, big nate strikes again, and big nate fron the top
Ubiuguk
No, a pronoun does not take the place of a verb at all; a pronoun takes the place of a noun or pronoun (called an antecedent) when the pronoun is the object in a sentence. Examples:You may borrow the book, I think you will enjoy it. (The noun 'book' is the antecedent for the object pronoun 'it'.)He is a student at the university, I miss him when he is away. (The pronoun 'he' is the antecedent for the object pronoun 'him')
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'book' is it.The pronoun 'it' is a subject pronoun or an objectpronoun.Example:I bought the book at the tag sale.It was only fifty cents. (subject of the sentence)You may have it when I finish it. (direct object of the verbs)
Susanna Whatman has written: 'The housekeeping book of Susanna Whatman, 1776-1800' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Home economics 'The Housekeeping Book of Susanna Whatman'
In the book "Maniac Magee" by Jerry Spinelli, Amanda loaned Jeffrey a book about "Beowulf."
There is no Susanna in the book of Daniel. Daniel was written hundreds of years before Jesus lived so I doubt if anybody in the book of Daniel walked with Jesus
Big Nate is the main character in Lincoln Pierce's book: Big Nate. His full name is Nate Wright.
Susanna is a character in the Book of Daniel in the Apocrypha of the Bible.
Big Nate: In a Class by Himself.
big nate strikes again
There is no definitive answer as the storyline of the Big Nate book series is still ongoing, with no clear confirmation of Angie and Nate dating again in future books.
yup it's 'Big nate strikes again'
Susanna English is the narrator.
When Susanna takes a dump.
The pronoun in the sentence is "you." It is a second person singular pronoun referring to the person receiving the book.