The word 'children' is not a pronoun.
The word 'children' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'child'.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
The noun 'children' is a word for persons.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: The children are ready to eat. They are hungry. I made Sandwiches for them.
The pronouns 'they' and 'them' take the place of the noun 'children' in the second and third sentences.
Children is not a pronoun. It is a noun in the plural.
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
There is one pronoun in the sentence: themselves.The pronoun 'themselves' is the third person, plural, reflexive pronoun.The pronoun 'themselves' reflects back to the antecedent 'children'.
It It is the pronoun for things
The word children's is not a pronoun, it is a noun. The word children is the plural form for the noun child. The word children's is a plural, possessive noun.
'than' is not a pronoun.
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
"Of" is not a pronoun. He, she, it, they, them, are all pronouns. "Of" is a preposition.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
The word 'or' is not a pronoun; or is a conjunction, a preposition, or a noun.
It's called a reflexive pronoun.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.