The personal pronoun 'she' is third person, a female spoken about.
NO!!! 1st person ; 'I' 2nd person; 'you' ( To answer the question). 3rd person; 'he/she/they'.
The pronoun 'this' is the third person, the person or thing spoken about. The first person is the one speaking; the second person is the one spoken to.
Yes, "he" is a third person pronoun, not a second person pronoun.
The words, "Do you have..." is the second person, the person spoken to.The third person, the person spoken about would be, "Does he have...", Does she have...", "Does it have...", or "Do theyhave..."
No, not third person. I believe that is in the second person.
He is a third person. I might be speaking about him to you. I am first, you are second, he is third.
The compound subject 'he and you' consists of the third person pronoun 'he' and the second person pronoun 'you'.
No, the pronoun she would refer to a third person. She is the person about whom I am speaking to you. I am first, you are second, she is third.
No. "You" is the second person. His, her and its are third person (singular) pronouns.
I is first person. You is second person. He or She is third person.
NO!!! 1st person ; 'I' 2nd person; 'you' ( To answer the question). 3rd person; 'he/she/they'.
The pronoun 'this' is the third person, the person or thing spoken about. The first person is the one speaking; the second person is the one spoken to.
Yes, "he" is a third person pronoun, not a second person pronoun.
The third person singular is has (he has, she has, it has).The first and second person singular is have (I have, you have).The first, second, and third person plural is have (we have, you have, they have).
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective in the second person point of view (the person spoken to).Example: John, your lunch is ready.
The first person is the person speaking. The second person is the one spoken to. The third person is the one spoken about. The similarity is that they are all persons.
Third person