English, asked by girishbjd, 7 months ago

Tick the group of Pronouns – a. Peter, dogs, John, car b. I,we, he, she c. both ( a)and (b) d.neither (a) nor (b)

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
60

QUESTION:

tick the group of pronouns -

  • Peter,dogs,John,car
  • I,we,he,she
  • both (a) and (b)
  • neither (a) nor (b)

ANSWER:

b) I , we , he ,she

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

what is pronoun?

A pronoun is a word that is used in the place of noun

kinds of pronoun:

1. personal pronoun

2. Demonstrative pronoun

3. possessive pronoun

4. indefinite pronoun

5. interrogative pronoun

6. reflexive pronoun

Answered by Sahil3459
0

Answer:

Option (b) only is the correct option

Explanation:

Pronoun definition:-

Pronouns are the word that takes place of noun.

Rules:-

1:- Subject pronouns are used when the pronoun is the subject of the sentence. You can remember subject pronouns easily by filling in the blank subject space for a simple sentence.

2:- Subject pronouns are also used if they rename the subject. They will follow to be verbs, such as is, are, was, were, am, will be, had been, etc.

3:-This rule surprises even language watchers: when who refers to a personal pronoun (I, you, he, she, we, they), it takes the verb that agrees with that pronoun.

4:- In addition to subject pronouns, there are also object pronouns, known more specifically as direct object, indirect object, and object of a preposition (for more detail, see the definition of a verb in the Finding Nouns, Verbs, and Subjects section). Object pronouns include me, him, herself, us, them, themselves.

5:- Pronouns that are singular (I, he, she, everyone, everybody, anyone, anybody, no one, nobody, someone, somebody, each, either, neither, etc.) require singular verbs. This rule is frequently overlooked when using the pronouns each, either, and neither, followed by of. Those three pronouns always take singular verbs. Do not be misled by what follows of.

To know more:-

https://brainly.in/question/15395012

https://brainly.in/question/47833116

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