Yes, there are pronouns for a male, female, neuter, or common gender.The pronouns that take the place of a noun for a male are:hehimhishimselfThe pronouns that take the place of a noun for a female are: sheherhersherselfThe pronouns that takes the place of a neuter noun or a thing of unknown gender are: it,itsitselfThe pronouns that take the place of a common gender noun or a noun whose gender is unknown or unspecified are: Imemyminemyselfweusouroursourselvesyouyouryoursyourselftheythemtheirtheirsthemselves
No, "he" and "she" are pronouns, not nouns. Pronouns are used to replace nouns in sentences to avoid repetition.
No it is not a pronoun.
Pronouns take the place of nouns and noun phrases in a sentence.
The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose, when. There are some sources that refer to how or why as interrogative pronouns but, unlike the above words, how an why don't take the place of noun, how and why take the place of a manner and a reason.
No, pronouns take the place of a noun such as: I, me, we.
to take the place of a common noun only
The personal pronouns that take the place of the proper noun Squanto is he as a subject and him as an object.
Yes, there are pronouns for a male, female, neuter, or common gender.The pronouns that take the place of a noun for a male are:hehimhishimselfThe pronouns that take the place of a noun for a female are: sheherhersherselfThe pronouns that takes the place of a neuter noun or a thing of unknown gender are: it,itsitselfThe pronouns that take the place of a common gender noun or a noun whose gender is unknown or unspecified are: Imemyminemyselfweusouroursourselvesyouyouryoursyourselftheythemtheirtheirsthemselves
No, the word vegetable is not a pronoun, it's a noun. Pronouns take the place of a noun (such as I, me, it).
Two types of pronouns are:Personal pronouns, take the place of specific people or things.personal pronouns; I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.Interrogative pronouns, used to ask questions, take the place of the noun for the person or thing that is unknown.interrogative pronouns: who, whom, what, which, whose.
The pronouns "I" and "me" are the first person, singular, personal pronouns, which take the place of the singular noun (name) for the person speaking.
The personal pronouns are called personal because they take the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.
No, "he" and "she" are pronouns, not nouns. Pronouns are used to replace nouns in sentences to avoid repetition.
"Pant" is a common noun. Pronouns are nouns that take the place of other nouns. They are: I, you, it, she, he, we, and they.
Seashore is a noun, not a pronoun. Pronouns are words that take the place of nouns. Examples of pronouns are him, her, their, it, us, your.
No it is not a pronoun.