Linking
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The word 'that' is functioning as a relativepronoun, introducing the relative clause 'that seemed the most loving'.
There are two pronouns in the sentence are:you is the subject of the sentence;me is part of the compound object of the preposition "with" (with Mike and me).The pronoun "you" can function as a subject or an object in a sentence.The pronoun "me" is an objective pronoun, a pronoun that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.
The only pronoun in the sentence is "I", a personal pronoun.The pronoun "I" is the first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun.I have seen this question answered on other sites, indicating that the question refers to the word "this" as a pronoun. It is not. In the given sentence, the word "this" is functioning as an adjective, describing the noun "platter".
I recieved a red wool sweater and a pair of blue corduroy pants from my funny, pretty Aunt Jenny.*The adjectives are bolded.
The pronoun 'yourself' is a reflexive pronoun, a pronoun that 'reflects back' to the subject antecedent.
The word 'that' is functioning as a relativepronoun, introducing the relative clause 'that seemed the most loving'.
Our meeting will actually be a videoconference.Saw what I did there? I bolded it. Oh-yeah.
If this is the question I just had, then the bolded word is "Clarinet", and therefore is an appositive.
There are two pronouns in the sentence are:you is the subject of the sentence;me is part of the compound object of the preposition "with" (with Mike and me).The pronoun "you" can function as a subject or an object in a sentence.The pronoun "me" is an objective pronoun, a pronoun that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.
The only pronoun in the sentence is "I", a personal pronoun.The pronoun "I" is the first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun.I have seen this question answered on other sites, indicating that the question refers to the word "this" as a pronoun. It is not. In the given sentence, the word "this" is functioning as an adjective, describing the noun "platter".
"The crowd's murmur rose to a buzz when they heard the boom." Bolded words are examples of onomatopoeia
No bolded letters; ergo, no possible answer.
What is the pronoun case of the bolded word? They congratulated us on our achievement.
You should not look at anyone else's paper during the exam. sh'ldn't should't shouldn't shouldnot
The subject of the sentence is what the sentence is about.The predicate of the sentence is the verb and the words following that relate to that verb.A sentence must have at least one subject and one verb. Examples of sentences with the subject and the predicate (the subject is bolded; the complete predicate is italicized with the verb bolded):The dog is hungry.The boy rode his bike.My friend came with me.The bus was late this morning.The teacher gave us a tough assignment.The boy ran down the dock and jumped in the water.Jack and Jane brought some cookies they had made.Jack baked the cookies and Janedecorated them.Jack is handy with a recipe, while Jane is quite artistic.The next twenty sentences are your job now.
The band never gave a reason for why the N is bolded.