The properties of a pronoun are:
Case, a pronoun is a subject, an object, or shows possession. For example:
Subject: We have lunch at one.
Object: Mom made lunch for us.
Possessive: Your lunch has an apple. The lunch with the grapes is mine.
Gender, a pronoun that is gender specific for male, female, and neuter. For example:
male: He has a new car.
female: The green car belongs to her.
neuter: It has a flat tire.
Number, the pronoun is a word for one or more than one; singular or plural. For example:
singular: You are next in line. I am after you.
plural: They are next in line. We are after them.
Person, the first, second, or third person. For example:
First person: I have enough money for both of usto go. (the one/ones speaking)
Second person: You can choose the movie that youlike. (the one/ones spoken to)
Third person: He said it was great but she didn't like it very much. (the one/ones spoken about)
The pronouns have possessive forms of their own. They do not use an apostrophe for the possessive, as nouns do.
Example sentence:I wrote you this sentence. (direct object is 'sentence, indirect object is the personal pronoun 'you')
There is no pronoun error in that sentence.
A pronoun sentence is a sentence that uses a pronoun to replace a noun. For example, instead of saying "John is going to the store," you could say "He is going to the store." An adjective sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence that uses an adjective to describe a noun. For example, "The cat is black" is an adjective sentence because it uses the adjective "black" to describe the noun "cat."
None of the pronouns use an apostrophe for the possessive form. The possessive forms are:possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, their, its.
There are no uses for mercury.
The pronouns have possessive forms of their own. They do not use an apostrophe for the possessive, as nouns do.
The reader cannot tell what the noun or noun phrase the pronoun is replacing.
It uses the pronoun "you."
No, 'her' is an objective pronoun, used as the object of a sentence or phrase. 'She' is the subjective pronoun, used as the subject of a sentence or phrase. Example uses: Subject: She is my sister. Object: The book belongs to her.
Sometimes the pronoun "it" refers to a thing or idea. For example: If you see my pen, put it on my desk. Sometimes the pronoun "it" is an impersonal placeholder. For example: It is going to rain tomorrow.
The answer will depend on which of the many properties of fractions you are referring to.
The pronoun to use is "it," since spaghetti is a thing.Example : "Come eat your spaghetti before it gets cold."(In Italian, spaghetti is the plural of spaghetto, and uses theplural pronoun gli.)
None do. The possessives of pronouns are:mineyourshishersitsourstheirs
the answer is suck off
boats and planes
i have a cold...