They have many books.
He/She/It has many books.
Since there is no antecedent noun, there is no indication that the possessor of the books is a male, a female, or a thing. Examples:The boy likes to read. He has many books.Maggie likes to read. She has many books.The school has a good library, it has many books.
When using a pronoun, it is important to have:a pronoun with the correct number (singular or plural);a pronoun with the correct gender (male, female, neuter);a pronoun in the correct case (subjective or objective);a pronoun in the correct person (first person, second person, third person)
You hate to loan you things to people? stuff?
It is correct as far as it goes.The full sentence would be:I have as many books as you do.The obverse would be:You have as many books as I.This is correct, but again, the full sentence would be:You have as many books as I do.
To correct an ambiguous pronoun reference, you can:repeat the antecedentplace the pronoun nearer the antecedentrewrite the entire sentenceinsert an intensive pronoun after the ambiguous pronoun
The term "Just between you and I" is not a sentence. It is a prepositional phrase.The pronoun "I" is incorrect. The pronoun "I" is a subject pronoun uses as part of the compound object of the preposition.The pronoun "you" is correct. The pronoun "you" can function as a subject or an object in a sentence.The correct prepositional phrase is: Just between youand me...
The pronoun 'I' is the subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the object pronoun. The correct phrase is, "Just between you and me..."; because 'you and me' is the object of the preposition 'between'.
No, the correct grammar is "he and you." "Him" is used as an object pronoun, while "he" is used as a subject pronoun. So, the correct phrasing would be "he and you."
No it's not correct. The word "am" only sounds grammatically correct with the pronoun of I
The correct pronoun for society is it.The correct pronouns for societies are they for a subject and them for the object of a verb or a preposition.
The pronoun their is correct because the antecedent (presenters) is plural.
Yes, "who is watching whom" is grammatically correct. "Who" is the subject pronoun and "whom" is the object pronoun in this question.