In the sentence, 'This is the author's first book.', the pronoun is 'this' a demonstrative pronoun.
The demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those) take the place of a noun indicating near or far in place or time.
The pronoun 'that' is functioning as a relative pronoun, introducing the relative clause 'that contains an account of early space flights' that relates information about its antecedent 'book'.
"I" is the answer; it is the only pronoun always capitalized. It is the first person singular nominative personal pronoun in English.
The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific thing.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of a singular noun and functions as the subject or the object in a sentence.Example: The book's cover was torn so it was half price.
The type of pronoun that comes right after the verb is an object pronoun.
I think you mean what is the noun that a pronoun replaces. The noun that a pronoun replaces is called the antecedent. Example:In the sentence: John lost his math book, I think this belongs to him.The noun 'John' is the antecedent for the pronoun 'him'.
The pronoun 'this' is a demonstrative pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun indicated (by gesture or in a previous sentence).The demonstrative pronouns take the place of a noun indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, and those.Note: The word 'this' is an adjective when placed before a noun to describe the noun.Example: This book is the author's first.
The pronoun 'that' is functioning as a relative pronoun, introducing the relative clause 'that contains an account of early space flights' that relates information about its antecedent 'book'.
"I" is the answer; it is the only pronoun always capitalized. It is the first person singular nominative personal pronoun in English.
The pronoun this is a demonstrative pronoun, a word to show, to indicate, to point to. The pronoun this indicates near in distance or time in the singular form; for example:This is my bike, I don't know who owns that one.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.
The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific thing.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of a singular noun and functions as the subject or the object in a sentence.Example: The book's cover was torn so it was half price.
The type of pronoun that comes right after the verb is an object pronoun.
"We" is a pronoun, specifically a first-person plural pronoun used to refer to oneself and at least one other person.
a nominative pronoun.
I think you mean what is the noun that a pronoun replaces. The noun that a pronoun replaces is called the antecedent. Example:In the sentence: John lost his math book, I think this belongs to him.The noun 'John' is the antecedent for the pronoun 'him'.
The pronoun 'its' is a possessive, singular, neuter pronoun.
Personal
A complement pronoun is a pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative (a type of subject complement).A predicate nominative is a noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.Example: The first place winner is you. (winner = you)