The two pronouns in your sentence are "he" and "it", and you didn't capitalize "Mark".
He is the pronoun for brother; it is the pronoun for joke. The word your is an adjective form of the possessive pronoun 'yours'.
The two pronouns in the sentence are "his" (referring to Mark) and "it" (referring to the joke).
The two pronouns in your sentence are "he" and "it", you also misspelled "didn't".
The sentence contains two pronouns: he and it
He giggled at the joke.
He is the pronoun for brother; it is the pronoun for joke. The word your is an adjective form of the possessive pronoun 'yours'.
The two pronouns in the sentence are "his" (referring to Mark) and "it" (referring to the joke).
The two pronouns in your sentence are "he" and "it", you also misspelled "didn't".
He, it
The sentence contains two pronouns: he and it
He giggled at the joke.
my vice principal. no joke
Why did Zero not understand the joke in Stanley’s letter?
her brother is peter
No. A pronoun replaces a noun in a sentence and gives it a shorter name. So, joke isn't a pronoun, but if you refernce it in a sentence, you can replace the word joke with a pronoun, it.
My Brother and Me - 1994 The Practical Joke War 1-2 was released on: USA: 22 October 1994
Oh, dude, using the word "joke" in a sentence is like, super easy. You could be like, "I heard this hilarious joke the other day," or "Don't take everything so seriously, it was just a joke." See, it's like, not rocket science or anything. Just throw it in there and bam, you got yourself a sentence!