English, asked by akhand4913, 3 months ago

these are some interesting riddles . what is the demonstrative pronoun and demonstrative adjective​

Answers

Answered by palak9053
0

Answer:

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Demonstrative pronouns are pronouns that point to specific objects. They take the place of a noun, noun phrase, activity, or situation. They always consist of this, these, that, those, and sometimes include none, neither, and such.

Demonstrative adjectives are special adjectives or determiners used to identify or express the relative position of a noun in time or space. A demonstrative adjective comes before all other adjectives in the noun phrase. Some common demonstrative adjectives are this, that, these, and those.

Answered by prachijsr222
1

Answer:

A demonstrative pronoun is used to point something out. The demonstrative pronouns are this, that, these and those.

A demonstrative adjective identifies a noun or pronoun by expressing its position near or far with respect to time. The demonstrative adjectives are this, that, these, and those.

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