The word 'children' is not a pronoun.
The word 'children' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'child'.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
The noun 'children' is a word for persons.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: The children are ready to eat. They are hungry. I made Sandwiches for them.
The pronouns 'they' and 'them' take the place of the noun 'children' in the second and third sentences.
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
Whoever is a subjective pronoun.
The pronoun for the telephone of the children is "theirs".
There is one pronoun in the sentence: themselves.The pronoun 'themselves' is the third person, plural, reflexive pronoun.The pronoun 'themselves' reflects back to the antecedent 'children'.
The word children's is not a pronoun, it is a noun. The word children is the plural form for the noun child. The word children's is a plural, possessive noun.
'than' is not a pronoun.
Interrogative pronoun
The pronoun 'them' is the third person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
"Of" is not a pronoun. He, she, it, they, them, are all pronouns. "Of" is a preposition.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
The antecedent for both the possessive adjective 'their' and the objective personal pronoun 'them' is children.
It's called a reflexive pronoun.
The word 'or' is not a pronoun; or is a conjunction, a preposition, or a noun.