The personal pronoun "I" is the subject of the sentence.
The relative pronoun "that" introduces the relative clause 'these are the correct answers'.
The demonstrative pronoun "these" is the subject of the relative clause.
The entire relative clause is the direct object of the verb "hope".
The demonstrative pronoun is these.
The demonstrative pronouns are this, that, these, and those.
The demonstrative pronoun in the sentence is these.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun, indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.When a demonstrative pronoun is placed before a noun (for example, these answers) it is an adjective.
No, the pronouns 'she' and 'I' are subject pronouns used as the object of the preposition 'between'.The first use of the subject pronoun 'she' is correct as the subject of the clause (I hope she will keep...) even though it follows the verb 'hope'.The correct sentence is, "I hope she will keep this between her and me." The pronouns 'her' and 'me' are object pronouns needed as the object of the preposition 'between'.Or, to simplify, "I hope she will keep this between us."The pronoun 'us' is the plural, object pronoun.
Personal
Yes, 'I hope that you were sincere when you gave me the advice.' is a correct sentence.
this sentence would read, "Rewrite this sentence using correct capitalization holidays in November" hope that helps
The demonstrative pronoun in the sentence is these.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.
The demonstrative pronoun in the sentence is these.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun, indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.When a demonstrative pronoun is placed before a noun (for example, these answers) it is an adjective.
No, the pronouns 'she' and 'I' are subject pronouns used as the object of the preposition 'between'.The first use of the subject pronoun 'she' is correct as the subject of the clause (I hope she will keep...) even though it follows the verb 'hope'.The correct sentence is, "I hope she will keep this between her and me." The pronouns 'her' and 'me' are object pronouns needed as the object of the preposition 'between'.Or, to simplify, "I hope she will keep this between us."The pronoun 'us' is the plural, object pronoun.
The demonstrative pronoun is these, a word that takes the place of a plural noun (or two or more nouns) for something near at hand, indicated or previously mentioned.
Personal
The word I is a personal pronoun, the first person singular, and it is the subject of this sentence.
Yes, 'I hope that you were sincere when you gave me the advice.' is a correct sentence.
You is the pronoun, since it is substituting a noun (person place or thing)
There are no pronouns in this particular sentence. Remember, pronouns are words such as "he" and "she" and "I." Also, don't forget this one, "one" is also a pronoun that is not thought by many to be a pronoun. Hope this helped you.----WEG
Yes, it is.
No. You should have a subject eg I hope you ............. But without knowing the context this sentence is not correct.
You need to separate your question from the sentence you are asking about, but if the sentence you are asking about is "You hope that your family will return home safely." then the answer is "Yes." I would phrase your question as follows: Is this sentence grammatically correct? "You hope that your family will return home safely."