they them
Usher: us, she, he, and her
I, it and itself are pronouns. They begin with the letter I.
· few
Somebody is a pronoun. She is a pronoun.
everybody, everyone, everything, everywhere
The 16 three letter pronouns are:personal pronouns = you, she, him, herpossessive pronouns = his, itspossessive adjectives = his, her, its, ourinterrogative pronoun = whorelative pronoun = whoindefinite pronouns = all, any, few, one
Four interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, and which.
Usher: us, she, he, and her
The four main types of pronouns are personal pronouns (e.g. I, you, he, she), possessive pronouns (e.g. my, your, his, her), demonstrative pronouns (e.g. this, that, these, those), and reflexive pronouns (e.g. myself, yourself, herself, itself).
I have looked for pronouns that begin with w. I believe that there are no pronouns that begin with the letter w.
The pronouns that begin with the letter 'n' are:neithernobodyno onenothingnoneAll of the pronouns listed are indefinite pronouns.
There are no English pronouns that start with the letter Z. The furthest letter that English pronouns can start with is Y.
Pronouns that begin with the letter W are:wewhowhomwhatwhichwhosewhoeverwhomeverwhateverwhicheverwhosoeverwhomsoever
There are no pronouns in the English language that begin with the letter c.
I, it and itself are pronouns. They begin with the letter I.
In English, there is only one, one letter pronoun.The first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun: I
The pronouns that start with letter T are:Personal pronouns, they and themDemonstrative pronouns, this, that, these, and thosePossessive pronoun, theirsPossessive adjective, theirReflexive/Intensive pronoun, themselvesRelative pronoun, that