Many people do not know whether or not los is a female or male pronoun in spanish. it is known that los is a plural mal pronoun due to spanish classes that people attend.
female
Los barceloneses (male or mixed-gender plural)/ las barcelonesas (female plural)/ barcelonés (a man) / barcelonesa (a woman).
'The 'pongan...' part of the word makes it third-person plural. In Spanish, this could be 'ellos' ('they' masculine or mixed), 'ellas' ('they' feminine), or it could be 'ustedes' ('you' formal, plural, male/female/mixed gender)
Jason is a male name.
male italian
male cas lots of pubs and los of sport
When the number (singular or plural) and the gender (male, female, or neuter) of the pronoun agree with the antecedent, there is no error.
'Her' if the person is female. 'Him' if the person is male. 'Her or him' or 'him or her' if you do not know the person's sex.
the bible states there is neither male nor female in Christ Jesus
A pronoun must agree with the antecedent in number (singular or plural), in person (first, second, third person) and in gender (male, female, neuter).Examples of pronoun-antecedent agreement errors:The boys had fun on his fishing trip. (singular pronoun, plural antecedent)We had fun on their fishing trip. (third person pronoun, first person antecedent)Father had fun on her fishing trip. (female pronoun, male antecedent)
The pronoun for a female 'Terri' is she as a subject, her for an object, and hers to show something belonging to Terri.The pronoun for a male 'Terri' is he as a subject, him as an object, and his to show something belonging to Terri.
A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in person (first person, second person, third person), gender (male, female, neuter), and number (singular, plural).
The opposite gender of "his" is "hers," indicating a female possessive pronoun.
Hers is the equivalent for the pronoun his.
This means that when the noun to be replaced is singular, be sure to use a singular pronoun to take its place. When a pronoun takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns, be sure to use a plural pronoun to take its (their) place. When the noun to be replaced is a singular noun for a male, be sure to use a pronoun for a male (he, him, his, himself). When the noun to be replaced is a singular noun for a female, be sure to use a pronoun for a female (she, her, hers, herself).
No, the word 'male' is a noun and an adjective.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:The footprint looks like that of a male, it's too large for a female. (noun)There is just one male dancer in my dancing class. (adjective)The puppies are six weeks old. The male is the black. He is promised to my neighbor. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'male' is the last sentence)
A pronoun must agree with the number (singular, plural) and gender (male, female, neutral) of the antecedent noun.