The pronouns that take the place of the noun man are: he, him, his, himself.
Examples:
The man with the green tie is the manager. He is the person you should talk to.
A kind man helped me carry the package to the car and I thanked him.
The man with the garden lives across the street. The house with the fence is his.
The man with the garden lives across the street. His house has the fence.
The man made himself comfortable in the easy chair in the furniture department.
The pronoun for gingerbread man is "he."
"He" is the pronoun typically used for an old man.
The pronoun 'who' is an interrogative pronoun, used to introduce a question.Example: Who is on the phone?The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun for the person that is the answer to the question.The pronoun 'who' is a relative pronoun, used as the subject of a relative clause.Example: The man who called will call again tomorrow.The pronoun 'who' takes the place of the noun 'man' giving additional information about that man.
Not always. For example, He-Man is a noun. However, He-Man may be the only instance where he isn't a pronoun.
The word 'man' is not a pronoun. The word 'man' is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronouns that takes the place of the noun 'man' are he as a subject and him as an object.Examples:The man next door has a garden. Hesometimes gives me fresh vegetables, so I sometimes bake him fresh cookies.
The demonstrative pronoun is this.The common nouns are man and memory.
The subjective pronoun in the sentence is 'one', an indefinite pronoun and the subject of the phrase 'one of them'. The pronoun 'them' is the object of the same phrase and the indirect object of the sentence.
The pronoun 'who' is an interrogative pronoun which introduces a question:Who did you see at the mall?The pronoun 'who' is a relative pronoun which introduces a relative clause:The man who called said he will call tomorrow.
No, the word African is not a pronoun, it is an adjective. It modifies a noun. I spoke to an African man. Man is a noun, modified by African. That is the kind of man he was, African. A pronoun stands in place of a noun. I could have said I spoke to him, in which case "him" replaces African man. So the word him is a pronoun.
No, the word man is a noun, not a pronoun. The pronouns that take the place of 'man' in a sentence are 'he' as the subject of a sentence or clause; and 'him' as the object of a verb or a preposition. Any indefinite pronoun for a person can take the place of any noun for a man, such as one, anyone, some, someone, anyone, everyone, etc.
The pronouns that take the place of the noun phrase 'the tall man' are he as a subject and him as an object in a sentence.Example: The tall man ordered the special. Heasked for the sauce on the side. I told him that it was not a problem.
Yes, the pronoun 'who' is a nominative case relative pronoun and interrogative pronoun. The corresponding objective case pronoun is 'whom'.EXAMPLESinterrogative pronoun: Who gave you the flowers?relative pronoun: The man who lives next door gave me the flowers from his garden.