"Men" is a noun, not a pronoun. Pronouns are "he," "she," "it," "they," "we."
It is no longer socially acceptable to use a masculine noun to refer to both genders.
The grammatically correct form is women's rights.It is always written in the possessive form as it refers to the rights of women.
The word 'who' is a subject pronoun; the word 'whom' is an object pronoun. In your sentence, you need the subject pronoun because the pronoun is the subject of the relative clause 'who raise families'.
Its error is not grammatical, but lexical. "Amid" is the wrong word.
Yes. Fun is a noun. well,having word is used in four different situations. a. having food b. having sex c. pragnant women can say i am having a baby. d. having fun has newly introduced. so that is grammatically correct. regards Emma watson
No, "women" is not a preposition. It is a plural noun referring to adult female humans. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence.
The pronoun that takes the place of the possessive noun "women's" is the possessive adjective their.Examples:The women's meeting didn't break until six PM.Their meeting didn't break until six PM.
The pronoun is 'few', an indefinite pronoun that is taking the place of the unnamed actual number (a noun) of biographies.
The correct possessive form of the plural noun women is women's.Example: The women's project is preparing the playground for summer.
The feminine form of "women" is "woman." "Women" is the plural form, referring to two or more adult females. "Woman" is the singular form, referring to a single adult female.
yes its fine
they are friends (referring to women)
It would be more correct to say "Everybody has his/her opinion."The use of their in this sentence would be correct, though it is widespread in American speech. Originally, one would say "Everybody has his opinion", because "his" would refer to both men and women. However, as women's rights activists became more vocal, it was deemed improper to use the masculine form to describe men and women.Their is correct here. The use of their as a singular neuter pronoun has been valid for hundreds of years.