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English 14 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Identify the pronoun in the sentence below. Also identify the class and noun function of the pronoun using the abbreviations from the chart. For intensive pronouns, put NONE for noun function. Has anyone seen the car keys? Pronoun: Noun function: Pronoun class:

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I give medal

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Someone asked this question a while ago. Is it the same one? http://openstudy.com/study#/updates/527939b5e4b0e2d057c2d7ee Here are the noun functions: subject direct object indirect object predicate nominative object of preposition appositive subject of gerund possessive noun Here are the Pronoun Class: personal interrogative relative demonstrative reflexive intensive indefinite reciprocal

OpenStudy (kittiwitti1):

^ what she said.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes I think so its my homework my teacher uses a funny computer based program it was designed for homeschooling but she modified it so that's probly what that is

OpenStudy (kittiwitti1):

...we're not supposed to help you with homework, just saying ...I think.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

well my homework is a home test that I need to take and im cramming

OpenStudy (kittiwitti1):

*shrugs* You got help on this so whatever... I'm not sure anyway.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

anyways what do those mean?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Well ill try to help anyway i can with your original question. give me a sec.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

A pronoun (I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everybody, etc.) is a word that takes the place of a noun. In the sentence Joe saw Jill, and he waved at her, the pronouns he and her take the place of Joe and Jill, respectively. It also is a part of speech that replaces a noun in a sentence, assigning people or things as the subject. And any of a small class of relationship or signal words that assume the functions of nouns within clauses or phrases while referring to other locutions within the sentence or in other sentences: I, you, them, it, ours, who, which, myself, anybody, etc. are pronouns

OpenStudy (anonymous):

So anyone is the pronoun in "Has anybody seen the car keys?"?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes

OpenStudy (anonymous):

also what's a pronoun class and a noun function

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Functions of Nouns. Subject (S) - a noun or pronoun partnered with a predicate verb. Object of Preposition (OP) - a noun or pronoun answering "whom" or "what" after a preposition in a a prepositional phrase. Direct Object (DO) - a noun or pronoun answering "whom" or "what" after an action verb. www.towson.edu/ows/nouns.htm

OpenStudy (anonymous):

o.oummm Yeah im lost

OpenStudy (anonymous):

and I don't have very long

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@Secret-Ninja

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