No. Incite is a verb. EX: He was going to incite a riot with his speech against the government. The noun version is incitement. EX: After his speech calling for attacks on the government and the police, he was arrested for incitement to riot. It cannot be a pronoun.
The word is the noun-pronoun antecedent agreement. The term used when the pronoun agrees in person, number, and gender with the antecedent noun.
The pronoun "my" is a possessive adjective, placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker.
A pronoun. It replaces the use of a noun.ex. instead of...This question is stupidthe question being the nounyou could use it as a pronoun...it is stupid
A pronoun is any word that acts as a noun. An adjective modifies a noun. The difference between a possessive adjective (my, his, her) and a possessive pronoun is that the adjective form can be used before a noun, while the pronoun form is used with a verb. The pronoun "his" is both an adjective and a pronoun, while "her" is an adjective and "hers" is a pronoun, one that could not be used before a noun (It is her ball. It is her ball.)
Yes, a pronoun is a type of noun that can be used in place of a noun to avoid repetition in a sentence. Pronouns like "he," "she," or "it" serve the same function as nouns but refer to the noun indirectly.
A pronoun is used to take the place of or stand in for a noun.
noun if it is used as the subject pronoun if it is used as predicate
The word is the noun-pronoun antecedent agreement. The term used when the pronoun agrees in person, number, and gender with the antecedent noun.
The pronoun "my" is a possessive adjective, placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker.
A pronoun. It replaces the use of a noun.ex. instead of...This question is stupidthe question being the nounyou could use it as a pronoun...it is stupid
A pronoun is a noun that replaces a Proper noun (Name). For example, he, she, they.
A pronoun is any word that acts as a noun. An adjective modifies a noun. The difference between a possessive adjective (my, his, her) and a possessive pronoun is that the adjective form can be used before a noun, while the pronoun form is used with a verb. The pronoun "his" is both an adjective and a pronoun, while "her" is an adjective and "hers" is a pronoun, one that could not be used before a noun (It is her ball. It is her ball.)
Yes, a pronoun is a type of noun that can be used in place of a noun to avoid repetition in a sentence. Pronouns like "he," "she," or "it" serve the same function as nouns but refer to the noun indirectly.
They is a pronoun. It is used to replace a noun to avoid repetition
No, when is not a plural noun. It can be used as an adverb, conjunction, pronoun, and noun.
"Is" is a verb used to indicate an action or a state of being. In this sentence, "is" is being used as a helping verb to ask a question about the existence of a noun, pronoun, or verb.
"Who" can function as both a noun and a pronoun. As a noun, it refers to a person. As a pronoun, it is used to introduce a question or relative clause to ask about or refer to people.