The pronouns in the sentence are:
The antecedent for the pronouns 'their' and 'they' is class.
The pronoun is you.
In the given sentence, the pronoun 'which' is an interrogative pronoun, because it introduces a question.The pronoun 'which' can also function as a relative pronoun, if the sentence read, "The beach which I like best is West Beach". In this example, the pronoun 'which' introduces the relative clause, 'which I like best'.
Yes, the subject pronoun is "You".
The first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun "I" is used twice in the sentence.
The antecedent for the pronouns 'their' and 'they' is class.
The pronoun is you.
The pronouns in the sentence are it and nobody.The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun.The pronoun 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun.
The word him is the pronoun in the sentence.
In the given sentence, the pronoun 'which' is an interrogative pronoun, because it introduces a question.The pronoun 'which' can also function as a relative pronoun, if the sentence read, "The beach which I like best is West Beach". In this example, the pronoun 'which' introduces the relative clause, 'which I like best'.
The pronoun in the sentence is "it," which is referring to the noun that was previously mentioned.
The pronoun in the sentence is it.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'story'.
In the sentence, 'It will work for all kinds of plants.', the pronoun it is the subjective case, subject of the sentence; the third person, singular, neuter pronoun.
Yes, the subject pronoun is "You".
The first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun "I" is used twice in the sentence.
The appropriate pronoun is 'he'. In the sentence the pronoun he, takes the place of the noun 'teacher' as the subject complement following the linking verb 'will be'. A pronoun functioning as a subject complement (predicate nominative) is always a nominative (subjective) form.
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).