person, number
Verbs and nouns (or pronouns) are the basis of a sentence. Nouns (or pronouns), the subject of a sentence and a verb form a sentence or a clause.
Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs, but they do not modify nouns. Adjectives modify nouns.
Verbs need subjects, which can be nouns or pronouns.
Nouns and verbs and pronouns and adjectives and adverbs are parts of speech.
The question should be: Are the words she and him nouns or verbs? Definitely not. They are pronouns. She = subject pronoun; him = object pronoun
verbs, nouns, pronouns, adjectives
Verbs are important because they express actions or states of being in a sentence, indicating what is happening. Pronouns are important because they help avoid repetition of nouns and make sentences clearer and more concise by replacing specific nouns. Both verbs and pronouns are essential for conveying meaning and structure in language.
nouns, adjectives, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections
Verbs are the words that say what a subject is (being verbs) or does (action verbs). Nouns are words for persons, places, things, or ideas. Pronouns are words that take the place of (stand in for) a noun. Adjectives are words that describe nouns.
Adverbs CAN modify adjectives as well as other verbs. However, adverbs will not modify nouns or pronouns.
'what' is an interrogative pronoun ( pronouns are those which are used to substitute nouns) whereas 'will' is a verb. Since it shows a sense of doing something.
Nouns. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.