The pronouns "I, we, she, they, and he" are personal pronouns.
A personal pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.
Please provide the sentence so I can accurately determine the type of pronoun.
The pronoun "He" in the sentence is a personal pronoun, specifically a subject pronoun. It is used to refer to a specific person (in this case, a male) who is the subject of the sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence is "it," which is referring to the noun that was previously mentioned.
A personal (like he, she, they) pronoun used in the subject of a sentence.
There is no type of pronoun called an imperative pronoun. You may mean a pronoun that is the implied subject of an imperative sentence.An imperative sentence gives a direct command. An imperative sentence is the only type of sentence that does not require the subject be used. The subject is implied; for example:Stop!Look.Come here.Blend in one cup of milk.The subject of this type of imperative sentence is the pronoun you.
Please provide the sentence so I can accurately determine the type of pronoun.
The pronouns in the sentence are it and nobody.The pronoun 'it' is a personal pronoun.The pronoun 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun.
The pronoun "He" in the sentence is a personal pronoun, specifically a subject pronoun. It is used to refer to a specific person (in this case, a male) who is the subject of the sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence is you.The pronoun 'you' is a personalpronoun in the secondperson (the one spoken to).In this sentence, the pronoun 'you' is singular(based on the context of the sentence), but the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural.
Personal
The pronoun in the sentence is "it," which is referring to the noun that was previously mentioned.
A personal (like he, she, they) pronoun used in the subject of a sentence.
There is no type of pronoun called an imperative pronoun. You may mean a pronoun that is the implied subject of an imperative sentence.An imperative sentence gives a direct command. An imperative sentence is the only type of sentence that does not require the subject be used. The subject is implied; for example:Stop!Look.Come here.Blend in one cup of milk.The subject of this type of imperative sentence is the pronoun you.
The pronoun 'she' is a singular, third person, subjective, personal pronoun; a word that takes the place of a singular noun for a female as the subject of a sentence or a clause.
There is no problem with the pronoun 'she', if the person referred to is a female.
The word I is a personal pronoun, the first person singular, and it is the subject of this sentence.
The first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun "I" is used twice in the sentence.