The indefinite pronoun 'everything' is a singular form. Example:
Everything is gone. Everything was washed away in the flood.
The second person, personal pronoun you can take the place of a singular noun or a plural noun.Examples:Jack, I made lunch for you. (singular, takes the place of the noun 'Jack')Jack and Jill, I made lunch for you. (plural, takes the place of the nouns 'Jack' and 'Jill')Children, I made lunch for you. (plural, takes the place of the plural noun 'children')
It depends who you are referring to. If you are talking to one person it is singular. But to a group of people it is plural.
The pronoun either is singular. It refers to one choice or the other, not both.
There is often no antecedent for an indefinite pronoun.For Example:"You may have some, there is more in the kitchen." (In this sentence, there is no antecedent for either pronoun, the speaker and the listener know what is being discussed.)"You may bring anyone you wish." (There is no antecedent for the pronoun, the listener has to consider who that person may be.)"Someone left a watch in the rest room." (There is no antecedent for the pronoun because the person is unknown.)"We're expecting five people but none have arrived yet." (The antecedent is the noun people.)
The Antecedent Action is that part of the characters' experience which comes before the events of the story. If it has a bearing, information about it must be given either in the Introduction, or incidentally later on.
The second person, personal pronoun you can take the place of a singular noun or a plural noun.Examples:Jack, I made lunch for you. (singular, takes the place of the noun 'Jack')Jack and Jill, I made lunch for you. (plural, takes the place of the nouns 'Jack' and 'Jill')Children, I made lunch for you. (plural, takes the place of the plural noun 'children')
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
It depends who you are referring to. If you are talking to one person it is singular. But to a group of people it is plural.
The pronoun antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces. The noun either precedes the pronoun in the same sentence, a previous sentence, or is known to the speaker and those spoken to.For example:"When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train." "George" is the antecedent of the pronoun "he.""Students in on-line classes have to keep up with their assignments." The word "students" is the antecedent of the word "their."
The pronoun either is singular. It refers to one choice or the other, not both.
The noun public (the public, the citizenry) is a collective noun, and can use either the singular or plural form of a verb depending on its use.
No, the pronoun antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces. The noun either precedes the pronoun in the same sentence, a previous sentence, or known to the speaker and those spoken to. For example, "When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train." "George" is the antecedent of "he."
The object pronouns are:meyouhimheritusyouthem (some lists stop here)mineyourshishersitstheirsone (some lists include one, some do not)
No. It would be either "you saw" or "you have seen" or "have you seen?" depending on context.
Particle or wave? It is both or either, depending on how it is observed, as is everything else in quantum mechanics.
There is often no antecedent for an indefinite pronoun.For Example:"You may have some, there is more in the kitchen." (In this sentence, there is no antecedent for either pronoun, the speaker and the listener know what is being discussed.)"You may bring anyone you wish." (There is no antecedent for the pronoun, the listener has to consider who that person may be.)"Someone left a watch in the rest room." (There is no antecedent for the pronoun because the person is unknown.)"We're expecting five people but none have arrived yet." (The antecedent is the noun people.)