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Yes, the indefinite pronoun 'anyone' (anyone) is a singular form.

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Is anyone plural or singular?

Anyone is a singular noun.


Did anyone has or anyone have?

The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is a singular pronoun (anyone).Examples:Anyone has the right to an education.Anyone is eligible to apply.


Is this sentence a pronoun-antecedent agreement with indefinite pronounsAnyone who requests a copy of the game may have it for their video library?

The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is considered singular and may take the third person singular verb 'requests'. The adjective pronoun 'their; may have a singular or a plural antecedent. It is singular when the gender of the antecedent is not specified, as in the case of an indefinite subject pronoun. 'Their' is in agreement with 'anyone'.


Is anyone singular?

Yes, the indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is singular(anyone).


Is anyone a plural noun?

The word anyone is not a noun at all. It's a singular idefinite pronoun.


Is the word anyone an indefinite pronoun?

Yes, anyone is an indefinite singular pronoun, a word that takes the place of an unknown or unnamed person.Example sentence: There are extra passes for anyone who needs one.


What are the pronouns in the sentence - All of us in the class wondered if anyone else was as amused by the film as you were?

The pronouns are: all = indefinite pronoun us = plural, objective personal pronoun anyone = indefinite pronoun you = singular, subjective, personal pronoun


Is anyone a singular word or a plural word?

The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is singular. Break it into its component parts: 'any' and 'one'. 'One' is by definition singular. Example:'Is anyone going to the party tonight?'


Is anybody singular or plural?

Anyone/anybody refers to =any person or individual.Anybody is an indefinite pronoun and is always singular.


Which kind of pronoun should go with a singular noun?

A singular pronoun takes the place of a singular noun.The 'antecedent pronoun agreement' is ensuring that the pronoun used agrees in number (singular or plural) and gender(he, she, or it) with antecedent (the word that the pronoun is replacing).


Anyone can leave whenever he or she chooses is that a correct use of pronoun-ascendent agreement?

No, "he or she" is not a pronoun-antecedent match with "anyone." A correct pronoun-antecedent match in this case would be "he or she can leave whenever they choose." Alternatively, using "they" as a gender-neutral singular pronoun is also widely accepted.


Which word in the sentence is a singular pronoun?

The singular pronoun in the sentence is which, an interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces a question.The pronoun 'which' takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question, which in this case, is the word 'which'.