The pronouns are you and us.The noun is game.
The question should be: Are the words she and him nouns or verbs? Definitely not. They are pronouns. She = subject pronoun; him = object pronoun
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
The object of baseball is to run across home plate more times than the opposing team.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'baseball' is it.example: Do you like baseball? It is my favorite sport.The noun 'baseball' as the noun for the game is an uncountable noun, but the noun 'baseball' as a word for a type of ball is a countable noun. The pronoun that takes the place of the singular noun baseball (the ball) is it. The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'baseballs' are they as a subject, and them as an object in a sentence.
Yes, my grandma has it.
A pronoun case error occurs when a subjective pronoun is used as an object; or an objective pronoun is used as a subject in a sentence.Example: I sent the email to she. (the pronoun 'she' is a subject pronoun used as the object of the preposition 'to')
i just played a game with my grandma, she watched and i got 7 :)
i just played a game with my grandma, she watched and i got 7 :)
golf. my dead grandma knew that answer
[object Object]