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Your search had over 1000 results, so we are only showing the results that start with the term. For a more advanced search, use the the forum search. A María le / la persiguió la mala suerte - pronoun - grammar
a person or a member of its/his/her/your family (pronoun) - grammar
a person who I know that he will be able to (relative pronoun) - grammar
a third person pronoun
Agarra tu talón derecho (possessive pronoun) - grammar
Alguien [Somebody] + possessive pronoun - his/her/its/their - grammar
¿Alguien tiene? (Impersonal Pronoun) - grammar
alguno lo sabe, algunos lo saben (Alguno = Pronoun) - grammar
all (pronoun) - it all depends on - grammar
although they was [were] a bit acid (pronoun) - grammar
¿Amas bailar? (pronoun) - grammar
Añádales (imperative, object pronoun) - grammar
And he to his/hers (pronoun) - grammar
antecedent and relative pronoun - grammar
as regards + object pronoun?? - grammar
baby : pronoun (he/she/it?) - grammar
break your neck - te pronoun? - grammar
Cámbiate la/tu vida (Pronoun Placement = Possession?) - grammar
card games [that] they played (relative pronoun) - grammar
child: pronoun (he/she/it?)
citizenry - plural or singular verb and possessive pronoun - grammar
Come with (without a pronoun)
Company, Contractor + possessive pronoun - his/its/their - grammar
comparable to that of - "that" as pronoun - grammar
Consentir + pronoun
consider + object pronoun - grammar
Convenient for/to +pronoun - grammar
cual - relative pronoun - grammar
Darle/Darlo de alta - pronoun - grammar
definite article or pronoun - grammar
Demon you (Noun+ Pronoun) - grammar
develop + reflexive pronoun - grammar
did you give it to me (IO pronoun) - grammar
did you send him an e-mail (pronoun) - grammar
dificultar (+ indirect pronoun) - grammar
dificultar takes indirect pronoun - grammar
direct object pronoun
Direct Object Pronoun - grammar
direct object pronoun - grammar
Direct object pronoun in subjunctive clause - grammar
direct object pronoun substitution
Direct Object Pronoun?? - grammar
dog: it/he/she (pronoun) - grammar
double pronoun - grammar
duchar/ducharse (reflexive pronoun) - grammar
Dummy pronoun - grammar
dummy pronoun - grammar
each one - possessive pronoun - grammar
Él (le) dio flores a su novia (Indirect Object Pronoun) - grammar
él (pronoun) = it - grammar
El anillo que le regalé a mi novia (duplication of pronoun) - grammar
El doctor le manda que la enfermera le de (IO Pronoun) - grammar
El empleador le / lo despidió (object pronoun) - grammar
el juguete es suyo = its? (Personal Pronoun it) - grammar
el que - relative pronoun - grammar
ella [le] besa (besar + indirect object pronoun) - grammar
Ella se la cocina (pronoun: se/le) - grammar
Ella te quiere dar / quiere darte (indirect pronoun) - grammar
en contra de + pronoun - grammar
en que / en la que (relative pronoun) - grammar
England: she/he/it? (pronoun)
escribe una carta para él / le escribe una carta (IO pronoun) - grammar
escuchar/hablar a (direct/indirect object pronoun) - grammar
Éstas son las personas para quienes él trabaja (Demonstrative Pronoun/Adjective) - grammar
éste / este (pronoun) - grammar
Este as a "personal" pronoun. - grammar
Este libro es suyo (yours, possesive pronoun) - grammar
Everyone is born (pronoun) - grammar
excepto + a + object pronoun - grammar
favorecer + direct object or indirect object pronoun? - grammar
for + noun/pronoun + infinitive [alternative structures] - grammar
gerund form after a pronoun. - grammar
get + pronoun + past participle - grammar
grammar relative pronoun adverb clause - grammar
hablarle (Le - Object Pronoun) - grammar
Hace tiempo que no le veo (direct/indirect object pronoun) - grammar
Have her call me - Have + pronoun + infinitive - grammar
he himself, you yourself (reflexive pronoun) - grammar
he mentioned me to you (indirect + direct object pronoun) - grammar
he/she creates (pronoun) - grammar
his sister in her room (personal pronoun) - grammar
How+pronoun+verb - grammar
I admire him = lo/le admiro (object pronoun) - grammar
I admire you = le/la admiro (Direct Object Pronoun) - grammar
I am from Spain, but (I) arrived (subject pronoun) - grammar
I am included - incluyéndome ("se" pronoun) - grammar
I don’t have to look like pointy-chinned me. (adjective + pronoun) - grammar
I enjoy them (gozar + direct object pronoun) - grammar
I grabbed a stone, (I) threw it - repeat personal pronoun - grammar
I hear her cry (object pronoun) - grammar
I hit him (Direct/Indirect Object Pronoun) - grammar
I plunged (myself) into the water (Reflexive pronoun) - grammar
I understand him = Lo/le comprendo (direct object pronoun) - grammar
I, myself, (comma + reflexive pronoun) - grammar
I'll drop by Ricardo's (place) (personal pronoun) - grammar
If someone comes, tell him/her/them (pronoun + collective noun) - grammar
If.../ pronoun+should (conditional) - grammar
Imperative form with pronoun? - grammar
implies the impersonal pronoun "it" - grammar
In case you're interested (singular or plural pronoun) - grammar
indirect object pronoun
indirect object pronoun - grammar
Indirect object pronoun - grammar
indirect object pronoun - grammar
indirect object pronoun - (le) pregunto a él - grammar
Indirect object pronoun - le puedes contar todo - grammar
Indirect Object pronoun 'nos' - grammar
Indirect object pronoun (le) - grammar
Indirect Object Pronoun + gusta - grammar
Indirect object pronoun + masculine/feminine - a él/ella no le importa - grammar
indirect object pronoun + orar, rezar - grammar
Indirect object pronoun "le" - grammar
Indirect object pronoun Le - grammar
indirect object pronoun "le" + escribir - grammar
Indirect object pronoun usage - grammar
Indirect Object Pronoun with no Indirect Object - grammar
indirect pronoun - alquilar(le) a Juan el apartamento - grammar
Indirect pronoun and indirect object in same sentence? - grammar
Infinitive + Pronoun? - grammar
informal command tener, mantener + pronoun, "nos" - grammar
invitarle (IO, DO pronoun) - grammar
IO & DO pronoun - grammar
it - place of this pronoun - grammar
it is them/they who are going to search (object pronoun) - grammar
it was a dream (pronoun) - grammar
It was a great day. Pronoun "it" or expletive "it"? - grammar
Its as a possessive pronoun - grammar
Its: Possessive pronoun or adjective - grammar
Juan es (un) amigo mío (pronoun) - grammar
keep their names (Object Pronoun) - grammar
la (pronoun)
la / lo (feminine objective pronoun) - grammar
la he visto / le he visto / he visto a mi madre (object pronoun) - grammar
la señorita que/quien le va a dar (relative pronoun) - grammar
las están (pronoun + estar) - grammar
le - Can it be a direct object (DO) pronoun? - grammar
Le / les permite a las autoridades (IO pronoun) - grammar
le ayuda (object pronoun) - grammar
Le ayudan a realizar más actividades (Indirect object pronoun) - grammar
Le di la pluma a María (redundant IO pronoun) - grammar
Le puedo ayudar en algo (pronoun) - grammar
Le rompieron los anteojos ; Se le cae el pelo - pronoun - grammar
Le temo a las ratas (Temer + indirect object pronoun) - grammar
Le traigo la carta a / para María (IO pronoun) - grammar
¿Le vas a entregar mi carta a tu profesora? (Object Pronoun) - grammar
le/lo pillé (pillar + object pronoun) - grammar
Leave a tip for the waiter (indirect object pronoun) - grammar
les ayuda a la persona (DO pronoun) - grammar
les está enseñando (indirect object pronoun) - grammar
llevarles, trasladarlos (direct object pronoun) - grammar
lo (not as a pronoun) - grammar
Lo baño a mi hijo (Direct object pronoun) - grammar
lo del horario (pronoun) - grammar
Lo dudo mucho ; No te preocupes - pronoun use - grammar
lo that is not pronoun? - grammar
lo torturaron y le destrozaron (pronoun) - grammar
lo/le voy a matar (object pronoun + personal 'a') - grammar
Los enseñé a los niños (Indirect Object pronoun) - grammar
Los italianos / Nosotros los italianos (Pronoun skipping) - grammar
Los nombres son de los que (pronoun)
los quisiera matar (DO pronoun) - grammar
los voy a ver / voy a verlos (pronoun) - grammar
Mandar + Indirect Object Pronoun - grammar
más de lo que (relative pronoun) - grammar
Matar + pronoun - grammar
me cepillo zapatos (pronoun) - grammar
Me gusta la sopa (reflexive pronoun) - grammar
me lo dieron (object pronoun) - grammar
me tendré que casar / tendré que casarme (reflexive pronoun word order) - grammar
mi mamá nos hace las maletas (Indirect Object Pronoun) - grammar
mi/la piel (Possessive pronoun/article) - grammar
molestarte (IO pronoun) - grammar
much as adverb or pronoun - grammar
muchas fotos --> direct object pronoun - grammar
Multiple Antecedents for the direct object pronoun - grammar
negative/affirmative tú command pronoun placement - grammar
No (le) compré este escritorio para mi hijo - Indirect Object Pronoun - grammar
no quiere presentarsenos (Double Object Pronoun) - grammar
No te preocupes - pronoun object - grammar
nos trajo la comida a nosotros (Object Pronoun) - grammar
Object Pronoun (it) - grammar
Object pronoun + reservar - grammar
Object pronoun in definig relative clause - grammar
object pronoun placement - Pidióme el jarro de agua - grammar
object pronoun position with reflexive verbs - grammar
object pronoun*
objecto directo (pronoun, placement) - grammar
omission of a subject pronoun with two verbs - grammar
omission of personal pronoun (in a series of actions) - grammar
omit relative pronoun - grammar
omit relative pronoun - grammar
Omitting the Reflexive pronoun - grammar
Omitting the relative pronoun in defining relative clauses - grammar
on my own (pronoun preceded by determiner) - grammar
Once + pronoun + verb tense (English) - grammar
one (pronoun) - grammar
order of adjectives - second person plural pronoun - grammar
Other - pronoun - grammar
other (adjective) / others (pronoun) - grammar
Others as a pronoun - grammar
parte lavándolo (pronoun order) - grammar
Perdido es lo que estoy - pronoun - grammar
persigue pronoun (?) - grammar
personal computers ones (Pronoun "ones") - grammar
personal pronoun+gerund - grammar
Placement of subject pronoun - grammar
¿Por qué practicas tu [tú] español? (Placement of pronoun) - grammar
position of object pronoun - grammar
position of pronoun - grammar
Position of pronoun 'la' - grammar
Position of subject pronoun - grammar
possesive pronoun for "minor" - grammar
possesive pronoun: everybody/nobody+verb+collective nouns - grammar
possessive pronoun - grammar
possessive pronoun in a series ("su/sus") - grammar
praise you (formal Direct Object Pronoun) - grammar
prepositional object pronoun for 'it' - grammar
Prepositions = it/them? (Plural pronoun) - grammar
Pronoun
Pronoun - grammar
Pronoun - grammar
pronoun - Está bebiendo (ella) - grammar
Pronoun - llamarla / llamar a ella - grammar
pronoun - Myself, I’m really not keen on - grammar
pronoun - uno es pobre - grammar
Pronoun - usually I like them - grammar
pronoun : animals (it/he/she?) - grammar
pronoun : subject pronoun : repetition?
pronoun + animal = he/she/it - grammar
Pronoun + Infinitive - like you to give / like that you give - grammar
pronoun and preposition. "HER" "OF"
pronoun antecedents - grammar
pronoun before verb or attached to infinitive? - puede traerme/me puede traer - grammar
Pronoun for the word "character" - grammar
pronoun issues - grammar
Pronoun "lo" - verb placement - grammar
pronoun not hitched to a verb - grammar
Pronoun placement - I am brushing them - grammar
pronoun position - grammar
Pronoun question - grammar
pronoun replacement
Pronoun Reversal
pronoun substitution
Pronoun usage problem. - grammar
Pronoun use with gerunds - grammar
Pronoun with "habia maltrado" - grammar
Pronoun-verb order with reflexive verbs - grammar
Pronoun: possessive pronoun with person of unknown gender (user: his/her/their) - grammar
pronoun+do+verb - grammar
Pronoun+the+Sustantive...
Proper Spanish pronoun to refer to a collective group? - grammar
Publicaciones que incluyen = Publications that include (relative pronoun) - grammar
Put them on (phrasal verb + pronoun) - grammar
putting the direct object pronoun before or after - grammar
que impulsa [relative pronoun] - grammar
¿Qué la está preguntando María? (la, indirect object pronoun) - grammar
questions with whose as an adjective and as a pronoun - grammar
quien or que - relative pronoun - grammar
quiere hacerlo / lo quiere hacer (pronoun) - grammar
quiere lavarlo (pronoun order) - grammar
¿Quieres volver a verme? (Object Pronoun Placement) - grammar
Quiero poderlo hablar (Object pronoun) - grammar
quiero verle (ver + Indirect Object pronoun) - grammar
redundant object pronoun - a mis padres les compraron... - grammar
reflexive pronoun - nos tenemos que levantar - grammar
reflexive pronoun - pulled her dressing gown tightly round herself - grammar
reflexive pronoun + non-infinitive? - grammar
reflexive pronoun with any verb?? - grammar
relative pronoun - grammar
Relative pronoun - grammar
Relative Pronoun - Agreement - grammar
relative pronoun - it was/which was - grammar
relative pronoun - who/which we go with - grammar
relative pronoun 'que' + reverse constructed verb - grammar
relative pronoun "el que" - grammar
relative pronoun WHO ¿Reemplaza al sujeto o al objeto? - grammar
relative pronoun: who/that/ whom - grammar
repetition of I.O. pronoun? - grammar
reported speech - pronoun "ese" - grammar
request + subject pronoun + bare infinitive - grammar
resumptive pronoun
Review for indirect object pronoun - grammar
sabes cuándo volverá (+ pronoun) - grammar
se - Pronoun - grammar
se (pronoun) - grammar
se + object pronoun + auxiliary verb - grammar
se acompaña de hombres (pronoun) - grammar
se as in indirect object pronoun - grammar
se habla español -> se lo habla (Impersonal Se + pronoun) - grammar
Se lo doy a ella (Prepositional Phrase without Indirect Object Pronoun) - grammar
se me hace agua la boca (pronoun) - grammar
se quemó la mano - personal pronoun - grammar
she / it (pronoun for countries) - grammar
she as a pronoun of any country
She’s waited two years (pronoun antecedent) - grammar
show to or shopw+pronoun - grammar
Straits of (the) Malacca region (pronoun) - grammar
su conocimiento (pronoun) - grammar
subject pronoun
subject pronoun *
subject pronoun + conjugated verbs - tú comienzas - grammar
Subjective pronoun: "Yo" - grammar
submerge + pronoun "myself"? - grammar
Such as plus object/subject pronoun. - grammar
Summer is a time (when) millions of tourists come (relative pronoun) - grammar
Take over + pronoun - grammar
te - ayudarte (infinitive + pronoun) - grammar
te amo / amarte (pronoun me/te/se before/after verb) - grammar
te la / le traeré (Direct Object pronoun) - grammar
te quiero, me gusta (pronoun) - grammar
Te recomiendo que hagas galletas (indirect pronoun) - grammar
Ten tú una Navidad feliz (Pronoun position) - grammar
Tenía que enseñarle a los niños - singular / plural pronoun - grammar
That's better than + pronoun/noun + verb - grammar
That's mine / Es mío. (Possessive adjective or pronoun) - grammar
The cinema that we go to - relative pronoun - grammar
the man who (Relative Pronoun) - grammar
The man who = el hombre al que (relative pronoun + faltar/gustar) - grammar
The one I'm working on (Pronoun "the one" + Preposition) - grammar
The population who lives on his job — Collective possessive pronoun - grammar
The sirens of the rocks, they beckon me - insertion of pronoun - grammar
their as a singular pronoun - grammar
thereby + gerund + pronoun - grammar
They should sit over there (gender-neutral pronoun) - grammar
this car is his (possessive pronoun) - grammar
This pronoun is second person singular.
Those are the students (demostrative pronoun, personal reference) - grammar
to + Accusative Pronoun (want me to do/go) - grammar
to feel dependent on him (indirect object pronoun) - grammar
todos los trenes se detendrán (pronoun) - grammar
tómate, véase, escúchate (Imperatives with reflexive pronoun) - grammar
travel guide and first person plural pronoun (we) - grammar
Turn them down or hire them. (pronoun repetition) - grammar
two (a case of ellipsis or pronoun ?) - grammar
two elder sisters who/whom/that I love (pronoun omission) - grammar
Two friends saw themselves in the mirror (reflexive pronoun) - grammar
Uds. no fueron los que me eligieron - verb + relative pronoun - grammar
understand her better (direct object pronoun) - grammar
Until I moved to Miami did I find how (Auxiliary before pronoun in affirmative sentences) - grammar
Using "it" indirect pronoun - grammar
usted + ayudar + pronoun - grammar
ustedes + pronoun - Voy a hablarlos/hablarles - grammar
Ustedes commands w/nos pronoun - grammar
Vas a dar el libro a él / Le vas a dar el libro a él (Indirect Object Pronoun) - grammar
ver + pronoun - grammar
Verb construct + object pronoun - grammar
verb+pronoun+verb - grammar
Visitóse [vistióse] Alicia con unos pantalones (reflexive pronoun + conjugated verb) - grammar
¿Vive (Usted) en una casa grande? (pronoun) - grammar
wants to help them and us (object pronoun) - grammar
we will go to it (indirect object pronoun) - grammar
what all (U.S. pronoun) - grammar
What are these procedures, Where these can be developed, (anaphoric pronoun in questions - these/it/they) - grammar
What pronoun is Ellas - grammar
what type of music define you - pronoun - grammar
what+verb or what subject/pronoun + Verb - grammar
where - relative pronoun - grammar
where (relative pronoun) - grammar
which (pronoun referring to a whole sentence) - grammar
which / that (relative pronoun) - grammar
which/what as a relative pronoun. - grammar
who (relative pronoun) - grammar
who/what/which she was referring to (determiner / pronoun) - grammar
Whose are these bones? (Adjective or pronoun) - grammar
whose as a pronoun or as an adjective - grammar
with each other (pronoun) - grammar
with me/I singing (object/subject pronoun) - grammar
without + possesive or object pronoun? - grammar
yo lo/le admiro (direct object pronoun) - grammar
yo sabía / sabía yo (pronoun) - grammar
you (pronoun) all / all of you (pronoun)
You can come with us = nosotros/nos? (pronoun) - grammar
... the verb has to agree with the nearer/nearest pronoun. - English Only forum
...I don't really know what you <what is a relative pronoun> - English Only forum
'ch (West Country dialect pronoun) - English Only forum
'I': capital and lower case (personal pronoun) - English Only forum
'One' as a pronoun - English Only forum
'one' as a pronoun - English Only forum
'One' as a pronoun. - English Only forum
'relative pronoun + result from' - English Only forum
'What' as a pronoun + plural verb - English Only forum
'what' as interrogative or relative pronoun - English Only forum
'When' is the right time? [pronoun?] - English Only forum
'where' as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
'Where/When' used as a pronoun in relative clauses? - English Only forum
'yourself'--How do I use this pronoun? - English Only forum
‘that’ is relative pronoun or relative adverb? - English Only forum
“pronoun + happen to” vs. “as it happens” - English Only forum
“that” comes before “relative pronoun” or“ relative adverb” - English Only forum
(comma), that (relative pronoun) - English Only forum
(salvage as much as possible) an adverb modifying a pronoun? - English Only forum
~as distinguished from~ [restrictive relative pronoun 'as'] - English Only forum
a compound relative pronoun 'what'? - English Only forum
A dog will look down when they have done wrong [singular pronoun] - English Only forum
a lot of + possessive pronoun - English Only forum
A market receptive to it (pronoun) - English Only forum
a medical issue, <one> over which [relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
a possessive of a relative pronoun - English Only forum
a pronoun for one - English Only forum
A pronoun for "the previous section" - English Only forum
a pronoun problem - English Only forum
a pronoun problem - English Only forum
a pronoun referring forward to a noun - English Only forum
a pronoun with a noun in the possessive case - English Only forum
A question about "Preposition + Relative Pronoun + To Infinifive" structures. - English Only forum
A question about pronoun - English Only forum
A question about relative pronoun - English Only forum
a question over relative pronoun - English Only forum
A reflexive pronoun can't come in "between A and B"--true or false? - English Only forum
a relative pronoun - English Only forum
a relative pronoun as a complement - English Only forum
a relative pronoun between an infinitive and its referent - English Only forum
a relative pronoun replacing an object complement - English Only forum
A relative pronoun which? - English Only forum
A special way to use a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
A subject pronoun it and gender - It's a girl/boy. - English Only forum
A tricky pronoun? - English Only forum
a very interesting book ,<one/ the one> I have never read [pronoun 'one'] - English Only forum
About pronoun 'which/that/it' - English Only forum
About relative pronoun - English Only forum
Active/Passive sentence pronoun use - English Only forum
addition of 'the' to plural nouns followed by the relative pronoun 'that' - English Only forum
adj/pronoun problem - English Only forum
Adjective + as + pronoun+ verb - English Only forum
Adjective + for + pronoun + ing? - English Only forum
Adults do not talk to us—they give us ... [em dash / pronoun] - English Only forum
Adverb or Pronoun? - English Only forum
afford with reflexive pronoun - English Only forum
After seeing + pronoun + infinitive? - English Only forum
all (pronoun) singular or plural - English Only forum
all what - relative pronoun - English Only forum
all- used as a pronoun? - English Only forum
Ambiguous personal pronoun? - English Only forum
ambiguous pronoun - English Only forum
Another question about pronoun - English Only forum
Antecedant and relative pronoun placement - English Only forum
Antecedent confusion with pronoun "he" - English Only forum
Antecedent of a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Antecedent of Relative Pronoun - English Only forum
antecedent of relative pronoun - English Only forum
antecedent of relative pronoun - English Only forum
antecedent of the pronoun "it" - English Only forum
Any as demonstrative pronoun - English Only forum
any "common sense" <?> we might make of it [relative pronoun or relative adverb?] - English Only forum
any post 'that' breaks the rules [omit relative pronoun in identifying relative clause?] - English Only forum
Any/A pronoun that follows - English Only forum
are my strengths, as demonstrated by: 'as' a pronoun here? - English Only forum
Are these Sentential Relative Pronoun?? - English Only forum
artists sell painted pictures of <it /them> [pronoun?] - English Only forum
as [relative pronoun / conjunction] - English Only forum
As + pronoun - English Only forum
as ~ as noun / pronoun be - English Only forum
ask + noun/pronoun+for + something - English Only forum
auxiliary verb/past tense verb + pronoun - English Only forum
avoid the repetition of a pronoun - English Only forum
Baby [pronoun for?] - English Only forum
boots: I need to buy <some/ones> [pronoun 'one'] - English Only forum
Both and neither + object/subject pronoun - English Only forum
British English pronoun "us" is also equivalent to "me"? - English Only forum
"but" as a pronoun - English Only forum
but it is not essential for precise identification of the <noun> or pronoun. - English Only forum
Can 'a list' be represented by plural pronoun? - English Only forum
Can 'where' be used as a relative pronoun(subject) without any referent? - English Only forum
Can a relative pronoun be omitted? - English Only forum
Can a subjective relative pronoun be omitted? - English Only forum
Can adjectives modify a pronoun? - English Only forum
Can I use "before" as a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Can I use both theirs and both yours as a possessive pronoun? - English Only forum
Can "it" be a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Can "it" be modified by the relative pronoun, which or that? - English Only forum
Can personal pronoun like I, you, he refers to animals or objects - English Only forum
Can pronoun always precede noun? - English Only forum
can pronoun precede noun? - English Only forum
Can relative pronoun be omitted in non-restrictive clauses? - English Only forum
Can the determiner more modify the pronoun something? - English Only forum
Can the dummy pronoun 'it' be used to express opinions? - English Only forum
Can the pronoun IT refer to a living creature? - English Only forum
Can the relative pronoun 'which' have an adjectival phrase as its antecedent? - English Only forum
Can we use a reflexive pronoun in "between A and B"? - English Only forum
Can we use a verb phrase after an object pronoun? - English Only forum
Can "where" sometimes be used as a pronoun? - English Only forum
Capitalization of second person pronoun - English Only forum
Car <that> he says drives best : omitting 'that' (concatenated relative pronoun) - English Only forum
Case of pronoun after "than" - English Only forum
change "preposition + relative pronoun" into "relative adverb" - English Only forum
change the order depending on whether [gerund without subject pronoun] - English Only forum
Charles Lindbergh introduced the “flying pronoun we” - English Only forum
Child - pronoun to refer to 'child'? - English Only forum
Combine sentences using a relative pronoun - English Only forum
comma before 'as' / 'which' [conjunction, relative pronoun] - English Only forum
comma before 'both' [pronoun; absolute construction] - English Only forum
comma before 'each' [pronoun]: global companies, each with a - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [pronoun; comma splice]: played better, that is - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: a petition, filed by..., that - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: have this problem, that it - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: It saddened him that..., that - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: it was in Lyrical..., that - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: perceived as helpers, that - English Only forum
comma before 'that' [relative pronoun]: pleas for mercy, that - English Only forum
comma before 'who' [antecedent?, relative pronoun]: X of Y, who would - English Only forum
comma before 'who' [relative pronoun]: engineers , who use - English Only forum
comma before 'who' [relative pronoun]: gives it to Klara, who helps him - English Only forum
comma before 'who'/'whose' [restrictive clause?, relative pronoun] - English Only forum
comma before 'whom' [relative pronoun]: my father, beside whom she - English Only forum
comma before relative pronoun: when to use it? - English Only forum
comma before that [relative pronoun]: a deal struck down by..., that - English Only forum
comma before that [relative pronoun]: work for a company like yours<,> that rewards - English Only forum
comma before the relative pronoun "that" - English Only forum
comma before zero relative pronoun (that): legislation two senators - English Only forum
comma before zero relative pronoun (that): the bliss, nature can - English Only forum
comma instead of 'that' [zero pronoun]: The truth is, they don't even - English Only forum
comma or period before 'which' [relative pronoun]: He bought... Which - English Only forum
comma relative pronoun which: the Programme of the Commission which envisaged - English Only forum
comma with 'all of which' [pronoun]: by Tezuka all of which - English Only forum
comma with 'all of which' [pronoun]: three albums all of which - English Only forum
comma with 'each of which' [pronoun]: cats, each of which..., won't - English Only forum
comma with 'itself' [pronoun]: the train, itself, began to move - English Only forum
comma with 'myself' [pronoun]: I've seen it, myself. - English Only forum
comma with 'of which' [relative pronoun]: a book, the cover of which - English Only forum
comma with 'that' [relative pronoun]: the watch, that is on the..., - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [interrogative pronoun]: doubt they know, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [meaning?, relative pronoun]: mango trees, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: a continuous thread which is - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: deal with subjects which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: ellipses, and connector, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: had a number of jobs, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: have enough workers, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: he made mistakes which made - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: hormone... the pancreas, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: soup at the restaurant, which - English Only forum
comma with 'which' [relative pronoun]: tears with the sleeve which - English Only forum
comma with 'who' [meaning?, relative pronoun]: L waved at N, who - English Only forum
comma with 'who'/'which' [relative pronoun]: I, who am lazy, don't - English Only forum
comma with 'whom' [relative pronoun]: my elder sister to whom they - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: a greedy boy, who loved - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: a party animal, who enjoys - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: an Iowa native who's come - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: Dr. Connors who's my - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: for me, who wants - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: His uncle <> who lives in Hawaii. - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: The professional who was trained - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who' [relative pronoun]: Where is James, who was... - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who'/'which' [meaning?, relative pronoun] - English Only forum
comma/not before 'who'/'which' [meaning?, relative pronoun] - English Only forum
comma/not with 'who' [relative pronoun]: the people who chase him - English Only forum
Commma before the relative pronoun - English Only forum
Complex: relative pronoun+modal→simple and complex: those who→simple - English Only forum
Compound possessives with a pronoun - English Only forum
Concept of relative pronoun - English Only forum
Conditional: If they won't listen - "if" + pronoun + will? - English Only forum
Confusion of using pronoun. - English Only forum
Confusion with pronouns? (pronoun reference) - English Only forum
conjunction or relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Correct pronoun for states: states "who," states "that" - English Only forum
Could the pronoun “it” be used to indicate someone‘s “words” - English Only forum
Defining noun and pronoun in a sentence! - English Only forum
Definite pronoun+Possessive pronoun - English Only forum
deleted pronoun before "suffering" - English Only forum
deletion of relative pronoun preceding a quantifier - English Only forum
demonstrative pronoun 'it' - English Only forum
Demonstrative pronoun It - English Only forum
Demonstrative Pronoun Question. - English Only forum
demonstrative pronouns "this, that" vs personal pronoun "it" - English Only forum
Dependent clauses after pronoun - English Only forum
despite + pronoun - English Only forum
determiner + noun + of + pronoun - English Only forum
Did <pronoun + remain / remained> - English Only forum
difficulties in telling the referent of the pronoun "it" - English Only forum
Direct Objective as a Pronoun - English Only forum
disgusted + pronoun/noun + ing - English Only forum
Distinction between indirect question and relative pronoun - English Only forum
do I need a pronoun here? - English Only forum
Do I need the pronoun it - English Only forum
Do you always put the pronoun between a verb and preposition? - English Only forum
Do you know who he is / Who is he? [interrogative pronoun position] - English Only forum
Do you like? (without a pronoun/noun) - English Only forum
Does a pronoun use after "and" necessitate a comma before the "and"? - English Only forum
does a relative pronoun really introduce a subordinate clause? - English Only forum
Does Relative Pronoun have to follow Antecedent immediately in a sentence? - English Only forum
double omission of relative pronoun - English Only forum
Doubt about personal pronoun - English Only forum
dummy pronoun 'it' and impersonal subject 'it' - English Only forum
Dumy subject "it" vs pronoun "it" - English Only forum
each - pronoun vs adverb - English Only forum
Each student should save one's questions ['one' as personal pronoun] - English Only forum
easy rule how to drop the relative pronoun - English Only forum
electronic edition(repeat it, change it or use a pronoun?) - English Only forum
Elision of the pronoun - English Only forum
emails (that) you send... [omission of 'that'] [relative pronoun] - English Only forum
ending a sentence with a relative pronoun with a preposition - English Only forum
enjoying herself [Reflexive pronoun] - English Only forum
especially so + pronoun - English Only forum
establishes bias. <It> is [pronoun reference] - English Only forum
Everything as a pronoun/determiner - English Only forum
everything <that> there is [relative pronoun or conjunction?] - English Only forum
Extra subject after the relative pronoun - English Only forum
Feminine pronoun for cars and ships - English Only forum
firm footing (verb & pronoun to go with this expression) - English Only forum
First [as a pronoun] - English Only forum
first personal pronoun "I" - English Only forum
for/of and relative pronoun. - English Only forum
Free relative pronoun and personal pronoun together - English Only forum
frightened + pronoun - English Only forum
fused pronoun - English Only forum
Fused relative pronoun - English Only forum
Fused relative pronoun & Prepositions - English Only forum
gender of pronoun - English Only forum
generic pronoun "one" - English Only forum
gerund and to+ infinitive in questions with/without pronoun. - English Only forum
get it [it: dummy pronoun?] - English Only forum
go on + pronoun Okay? - English Only forum
Grammatical term for when a pronoun precedes what it's referring to - English Only forum
Had (pronoun) (past perfect verb) - English Only forum
has a cat, which has [relative pronoun] - English Only forum
He for a robot: suitable pronoun - English Only forum
He or she as personal pronoun ? - English Only forum
He talks to one like a teacher. [pronoun 'one': colloquial?] - English Only forum
he wanted the gentlemen of Virginia and then the United States to master ... their bodies and emotions [pronoun reference] - English Only forum
He... His.. [pronoun refers to?] - English Only forum
He's a creature come straight out of a nightmare [omission of relative pronoun] - English Only forum
He’d just shrug and tell them [pronoun references] - English Only forum
Help using pronoun, dog name - English Only forum
her (pronoun position in the sentence) - English Only forum
"Her" referring back to an indefinite pronoun [gender-neutral pronouns] - English Only forum
his company is interesting [possessive adjective or a possessive pronoun?] - English Only forum
his use of the plural pronoun `we' - English Only forum
How common is it to add a pronoun after a long modifier? - English Only forum
How to understand which is noun replaced by a pronoun? - English Only forum
How to use a pronoun - English Only forum
How to use pronoun - English Only forum
How to use the pronoun "it" correctly - English Only forum
"I" (he, she, we, they) as direct object pronoun - English Only forum
I am a friend of his [Possessive pronoun with 'of'?] - English Only forum
I can't risk + pronoun + VERB-ing - English Only forum
I deal a lot with (my/the) evasion [possessive pronoun] - English Only forum
I love it (expletive, pronoun, or both?) - English Only forum
I love you (pronoun type?) - English Only forum
"I" or "Me" in a compound pronoun - English Only forum
I want to know about relative pronoun phrase. - English Only forum
I went the distance she went [appositive case or relative-pronoun case] - English Only forum
I wondered <what> [Interrogative pronoun or relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
I'll do "what" she said. A relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun? - English Only forum
I'll go myself [reflexive pronoun with intransitve verb] - English Only forum
I/me (disjunctive pronoun): Who attended? <I, Me, My parents> and <I, me, my parents>. - English Only forum
Identify adverb and pronoun - English Only forum
Imprecise pronoun --this - English Only forum
in non-restrictive relative clauses can both relative pronoun and ‘be’ can be left out? - English Only forum
In return to + object pronoun [synonym for back?] - English Only forum
in which clause to put a name and its pronoun - English Only forum
"in which" relative pronoun or object of the preposition? - English Only forum
Indefinite Pronoun - English Only forum
indefinite pronoun + "or other" - English Only forum
Indefinite pronoun in reported speech - English Only forum
Indication by relative pronoun - English Only forum
insist+pronoun+on+-ing - English Only forum
intensive pronoun with objects/complements - English Only forum
Inversion when pronoun is the subject - English Only forum
Inversion with the subject as a weak pronoun - English Only forum
Is 'as' a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Is 'where' used as a noun or pronoun in question? - English Only forum
Is “than” a relative pronoun or a conjunction? - English Only forum
Is “which” a subject or an object pronoun? - English Only forum
Is it correct that an antecedent goes after a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
is "it" in this sentence an objective pronoun? - English Only forum
is it standard to ommit relative pronoun after 'could?' - English Only forum
Is Mr, as in Mr Podsnap, an adjective or a pronoun, or something else? - English Only forum
Is number before a noun pronoun - English Only forum
Is the personal pronoun IT needed in the following sentence? - English Only forum
Is the word "next" a pronoun? What is the antecedent for the Which? - English Only forum
Is there a "subject and pronoun don't match" problem here? - English Only forum
Is there any need for the pronoun "her" in this sentence? - English Only forum
Is "they" an impersonal pronoun? - English Only forum
Is this 'as' used as a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Is this 'that' a pronoun or a conjunctive? - English Only forum
Is "those" a determiner or pronoun in "those who" - English Only forum
Is use of 'by' required before emphatic pronoun - English Only forum
Is "which" used as a relative pronoun in this senctence? - English Only forum
is "who"(interrogative pronoun) after verb an object - English Only forum
Is "why" an interrogative pronoun? - English Only forum
it as an object pronoun - English Only forum
"It" - dummy subject, dummy pronoun - English Only forum
it -- tricky pronoun - English Only forum
it [place of pronoun] - English Only forum
it may not be [...] that is the crucial [that: conjuction or relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
"it" pronoun refers to? - English Only forum
It says it operates / They seem to have [Pronoun shift: from "it" to "they"] - English Only forum
it used as an object pronoun for plural nouns - English Only forum
Italicized pronoun question - English Only forum
its [possessive adjective and pronoun] - English Only forum
its as a possessive pronoun - English Only forum
Jane she is... (name + personal pronoun) - English Only forum
Jewelry -- (it/them) pronoun - English Only forum
joining two sentneces using a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Just as ..., so [verb pronoun] - English Only forum
KJV John 1:10 antecedent of the pronoun - English Only forum
leaving the pronoun out of a sentence - English Only forum
like+personal pronoun - English Only forum
Lincoln knew {his/the} Bible [possessive pronoun] - English Only forum
Locating what a pronoun refers to - English Only forum
locating what a pronoun refers to - English Only forum
"Long" verb + pronoun - English Only forum
Love you. Miss you. (Omitted subject pronoun.) - English Only forum
made it to the finish line/ the pronoun "it " - English Only forum
Manage + pronoun/that-clause - English Only forum
Many Times More [Adverbs modify pronoun?] - English Only forum
Me (object pronoun) - acting as a subject in a sentence - what is it really called? - English Only forum
me / my (object pronoun or possessive adjective) - English Only forum
me/myself reflexive pronoun: <He reminds me of me/myself.> - English Only forum
Merry Christmas and warm wishes [seasonal greetings: subject pronoun?] - English Only forum
mine / my [possessive pronoun / possessive adjective] - English Only forum
Minecraft and <his> players [pronoun?] - English Only forum
Misplaced pronoun? - English Only forum
Missing pronoun - English Only forum
missing relative pronoun - English Only forum
more <of>+noun/pronoun - English Only forum
much as pronoun - English Only forum
My her baby is so cute. [possessive + pronoun] - English Only forum
My-Pronoun? - English Only forum
Nationality as a pronoun - English Only forum
Naught as a pronoun or noun? - English Only forum
Need/want + noun/pronoun vs infinitive - English Only forum
Neither... nor... - [verb and pronoun agreement] - English Only forum
No city ever adorned <herself> [pronoun] - English Only forum
No one deprived of < his? > property [pronoun] - English Only forum
Non-restrictive relative pronoun - English Only forum
None (pronoun) : not any vs. no part, nothing. - English Only forum
Nonrestrictive relative pronoun - English Only forum
not only [noun] but also [noun+pronoun] - English Only forum
not only... but also... (pronoun order) - English Only forum
noun and pronoun mismatch - English Only forum
noun and pronoun usage - English Only forum
Noun or pronoun in the reported speech sentence? - English Only forum
noun or pronoun: Have you ever seen... - English Only forum
noun phrase + relative pronoun - English Only forum
object or possessive pronoun - English Only forum
Object pronoun (verb+object pronoun+infinitive/gerund/past participle) - English Only forum
object pronoun [him: direct or indirect object?] - English Only forum
Object pronoun after each - English Only forum
object pronoun for three pounds sugar. - English Only forum
object pronoun in answers - English Only forum
object pronoun or sub. p*verb - English Only forum
Objective or reflexive pronoun? - English Only forum
objective pronoun in front of V-ing from an SAT perspective - English Only forum
"of V-ing", to-infinitive, the relative pronoun - English Only forum
of+pronoun - English Only forum
Old English pronoun of "you" plural form? - English Only forum
omission of 'relative pronoun' - English Only forum
omission of nominative relative pronoun - English Only forum
Omission of Pronoun in To-Infinitive - English Only forum
Omission of relative pronoun - English Only forum
Omission of relative pronoun - English Only forum
omission of relative pronoun - English Only forum
omission of relative pronoun - English Only forum
Omission of the Impersonal Pronoun "It" - English Only forum
omission of the pronoun "I" - English Only forum
Omit the pronoun - English Only forum
omitting relative pronoun - English Only forum
Omitting Non Defining Relative Pronoun 'That' - English Only forum
omitting object pronoun, adding "to" and more. - English Only forum
omitting pronoun - English Only forum
Omitting pronoun and "to be" after while - English Only forum
Omitting the pronoun - English Only forum
Omitting The Pronoun Who - English Only forum
Omitting the relative pronoun AND 'to be' - rule? - English Only forum
One (Pronoun) and its possessive. - English Only forum
One as a relative pronoun: the theory one gets - English Only forum
One can control what one (they?) [pronoun for "one"] - English Only forum
"one" Indefinite/Relative Pronoun - English Only forum
One pronoun refers to two different things? - English Only forum
One relative pronoun followed by two clauses - English Only forum
One should not let <one's /their> thoughts ['one' as third person neutral pronoun] - English Only forum
one’s individual freedom ['one' as an indefinite pronoun] - English Only forum
order of a pronoun - English Only forum
order with pronoun - English Only forum
other (pronoun) - English Only forum
Other: adjective vs. pronoun - English Only forum
other(s) as Indefinite Pronoun - English Only forum
other/others [adjective vs. pronoun] - English Only forum
Out of home vs. out of <pronoun> home - English Only forum
Owing to +pronoun/adjective possessive+gerund - English Only forum
Own without possessive pronoun - English Only forum
participle and pronoun - English Only forum
participle phrase & relative pronoun - English Only forum
participle qualifying noun and pronoun - English Only forum
Past participle in front of subject pronoun. - English Only forum
pay his workers 'sufficient' to buy ... [pronoun?] - English Only forum
person + thing [relative pronoun to use?] - English Only forum
person to whom I owe all my success is <she><her> [subject pronoun vs object pronoun] - English Only forum
person whose book is this [relative pronoun or relative adjective?] - English Only forum
Personal pronoun - English Only forum
personal pronoun 'one' - English Only forum
Personal Pronoun + Verb - English Only forum
Personal pronoun + verb - English Only forum
personal pronoun as an antecedent - English Only forum
Personal pronoun as antecedent of a relative pronoun - English Only forum
personal pronoun it, instead of him - English Only forum
personal pronoun? - English Only forum
personal pronoun+done+verb - English Only forum
photographs (which?) Maria took [relative pronoun] - English Only forum
placing what a pronoun refers to - English Only forum
plural pronoun "ye" referring to a single individual - English Only forum
plural pronoun for singular - English Only forum
plural pronoun or singular pronoun? - English Only forum
Point [pronoun] finger at vs. point a finger at. - English Only forum
Posessive Pronoun - English Only forum
position of 'intensive pronoun' - English Only forum
Position of Relative clauses- Relative pronoun "that" - English Only forum
positions of the noun and pronoun of the same person - English Only forum
possesive pronoun+ V(ing) - English Only forum
possessive adjective into possessive pronoun [your ---> yours] - English Only forum
possessive case + pronoun - English Only forum
Possessive case pronoun "its" - English Only forum
Possessive instead of personal pronoun - English Only forum
possessive noun as antecedent for a pronoun? [Kevin's fingers...he] - English Only forum
Possessive or personal pronoun, that is the question. - English Only forum
possessive pronoun - English Only forum
Possessive pronoun 'her' for party/monopoly (economics) - English Only forum
Possessive pronoun + "being" - English Only forum
Possessive pronoun after pronoun object - They give her <her books, hers>? - English Only forum
possessive pronoun of "information" - English Only forum
Possessive pronoun vs "the" when followed by a restrictive relative pronoun - English Only forum
Possessive Pronoun: Her/Hers - English Only forum
Possessive pronoun: The film shows their everyday life (lives), (their) dreams ... - English Only forum
possessive pronoun+[favorite]+ noun - English Only forum
"possessive pronoun+demonstrative pronoun" used together - English Only forum
Predeterminer Vs Pronoun? - English Only forum
preposition + pronoun + ing - English Only forum
preposition + relative pronoun - English Only forum
Preposition + Relative Pronoun 'That' - English Only forum
preposition + relative pronoun 'that' - English Only forum
preposition + relative pronoun + infinitive - English Only forum
preposition and relative pronoun [in /to /on /of which] - English Only forum
preposition before the relative pronoun - English Only forum
prepositon and interrogative pronoun - English Only forum
prepositon+relative pronoun+infinitive - English Only forum
Present perfect with question pronoun, like what, why, when.. - English Only forum
Pronoun - English Only forum
Pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
Pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun before relative pronoun - English Only forum
pronoun 'it' to refer to a generic noun - English Only forum
pronoun 'they' - English Only forum
pronoun 'what': fused relative or open interrogative - English Only forum
pronoun ‘one’ for abstract noun? - English Only forum
Pronoun (relative or adjectival) - English Only forum
Pronoun (what refer to) - English Only forum
Pronoun (what refers to) - English Only forum
pronoun / antecedent sequence - English Only forum
Pronoun + Gerund - English Only forum
pronoun + imperative: there lives a dragon, which slay. - English Only forum
Pronoun + noun - English Only forum
Pronoun + Verb (past tense) + AS MUCH - English Only forum
pronoun 2 - which - English Only forum
pronoun after subject - English Only forum
pronoun agreement - English Only forum
pronoun agreement - English Only forum
pronoun agreement - English Only forum
Pronoun Agreement - English Only forum
Pronoun "all" as adjunct? - English Only forum
Pronoun and Citation - English Only forum
pronoun and its antecedent - English Only forum
pronoun antecedents in a long, complex sentence - English Only forum
Pronoun Case after such as - English Only forum
Pronoun choice? - English Only forum
Pronoun choices - English Only forum
pronoun for a baby: he, she or it? - English Only forum
pronoun for a batch of cookies - English Only forum
pronoun for a company/firm - English Only forum
Pronoun for a person who I don't know whether it is male or female - English Only forum
Pronoun for birds/animals/insects...? - English Only forum
pronoun for both someone and something - English Only forum
Pronoun for community - English Only forum
Pronoun for "couple" - English Only forum
pronoun for equipment -- it or they - English Only forum
Pronoun for eye glasses - English Only forum
pronoun for "funds" - English Only forum
Pronoun for God. - English Only forum
pronoun for persons with unknown sex [legal document] - English Only forum
pronoun for shoes - English Only forum
pronoun for "the being" - English Only forum
pronoun for "the general public": it or they - English Only forum
Pronoun for the government [they vs it] - English Only forum
pronoun for "The Maya civilization" - English Only forum
Pronoun for "the other(s)" and "another" - English Only forum
Pronoun He and Lord? - English Only forum
Pronoun "I" ,what will be the verb - English Only forum
Pronoun in conjunction structure - English Only forum
pronoun in this context - English Only forum
pronoun instead of uk, us - English Only forum
Pronoun "IT" - English Only forum
Pronoun "it" - English Only forum
pronoun "it" - English Only forum
pronoun "it" - English Only forum
pronoun it and that - English Only forum
Pronoun "it" for newborn children - English Only forum
pronoun "it" for people - English Only forum
Pronoun "it" "its" in the passage - English Only forum
pronoun it or them - English Only forum
pronoun of human beings - English Only forum
Pronoun of "other + uncountable noun" - English Only forum
Pronoun of "Person, everybody - English Only forum
Pronoun of "the user" - English Only forum
Pronoun of uncountable nouns [ it / them ] - English Only forum
Pronoun "one" with names of colours - English Only forum
pronoun or adverb - English Only forum
<Pronoun> or <Dummy It>? - English Only forum
pronoun or paraphrase? - English Only forum
Pronoun order, subject pronouns and object pronouns - English Only forum
Pronoun order... - English Only forum
Pronoun position - English Only forum
Pronoun position in phrasal verb - English Only forum
Pronoun Predicament - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
Pronoun Problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
Pronoun Problem - English Only forum
Pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem - English Only forum
Pronoun problem - English Only forum
pronoun problem and the meaning of ‘its parasites’ - English Only forum
pronoun problems - English Only forum
pronoun problems - English Only forum
pronoun refer to whom? - English Only forum
pronoun reference - English Only forum
pronoun reference - English Only forum
Pronoun Reference - English Only forum
Pronoun reference - English Only forum
Pronoun reference & Paraphrasing - English Only forum
pronoun reference of "its" - English Only forum
Pronoun reference or exclamation expression? (This has to be ... !) - English Only forum
Pronoun reference, confusion with IT - English Only forum
Pronoun referents - English Only forum
pronoun referring to a city - English Only forum
Pronoun referring to an "X of Y" structure - English Only forum
pronoun relative where / when - English Only forum
Pronoun repetition - English Only forum
Pronoun shift 3rd person singular and 1st person plural - English Only forum
pronoun "that". - English Only forum
pronoun "this" - English Only forum
pronoun to refer to "each of us"? - English Only forum
Pronoun to refer to people/public - English Only forum
pronoun usage - English Only forum
Pronoun usage - English Only forum
pronoun "whom" question - English Only forum
Pronoun-antecendent agreement question - English Only forum
Pronoun-noun agreement (they, a child) - English Only forum
pronoun-they them - English Only forum
Pronoun-Verb Agreement - English Only forum
Pronoun-which-antecedent - English Only forum
pronoun, subject or object after colon - English Only forum
pronoun: difficulties identifying the what “it” is referring to - English Only forum
Pronoun! - English Only forum
Pronoun+Continuous tense - English Only forum
Pronoun+noun+like+verb (singular or plural?) - English Only forum
proper pronoun for 'people' - English Only forum
proper pronoun for man / humankind - English Only forum
propose + pronoun + infinitive? - English Only forum
pseudo relative pronoun as ? - English Only forum
quasi-relative pronoun ? - English Only forum
Quasi-Relative Pronoun / As - English Only forum
question pronoun / interrogative pronoun - English Only forum
Questions about a relative pronoun - English Only forum
rather + pronoun + root-verb - English Only forum
reduce relative pronoun - English Only forum
reduced non-defining clause qualifying a pronoun - English Only forum
Reducing “a relative pronoun + verb” - English Only forum
reference of a pronoun - English Only forum
reference of the pronoun - English Only forum
Reference to a person by means of a singular or plural personal pronoun. - English Only forum
refering to a pronoun at the end of the sentence. - English Only forum
Referring to a person of unknown sex ...which pronoun? - English Only forum
Reflective pronoun 'themselves' or pronoun 'it'? - English Only forum
Reflective pronoun or Reflexive pronoun? Which one is correct? - English Only forum
Reflective verb without reflective pronoun - English Only forum
Reflexive or emphatic pronoun - English Only forum
Reflexive or emphatic pronoun - English Only forum
reflexive pronoun - English Only forum
Reflexive pronoun - English Only forum
reflexive pronoun - English Only forum
Reflexive pronoun, Can it be a subject of a sentence? - English Only forum
Reflexive Pronoun, please help!!!!! - English Only forum
Relative clause reducing: Sub+verb+relative pronoun+<verb-past> - English Only forum
relative conjunction / relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun preposition - English Only forum
relative pronoun `which´ - English Only forum
relative pronoun - omissible? - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun - When is it possible to omit? - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun ?? - English Only forum
relative pronoun 'that' modifying a type of person - English Only forum
relative pronoun 'that' only - English Only forum
relative pronoun 'those' - English Only forum
relative pronoun 'where' - English Only forum
relative pronoun ‘that’ and ‘which’ used next to one another? - English Only forum
Relative pronoun (with an implicit antecedent) versus Indefinite pronoun - English Only forum
Relative pronoun [There are 3 states ... which defines/define] - English Only forum
relative pronoun /possessive case - English Only forum
relative pronoun after 'near enough' - English Only forum
Relative pronoun after her - English Only forum
Relative pronoun after "something" in a relative clause - English Only forum
Relative pronoun and nominative case - English Only forum
relative pronoun and noun phrase - English Only forum
relative pronoun and relative adverb - English Only forum
Relative pronoun and relative adverb. - English Only forum
relative pronoun and relative clauses - English Only forum
relative pronoun and talk about/look for - English Only forum
Relative pronoun "as" - English Only forum
relative pronoun as a subordinating conjunction - English Only forum
relative pronoun as an object - English Only forum
Relative pronoun as the object of gerund - English Only forum
relative pronoun for - English Only forum
Relative pronoun for subject and object. - English Only forum
relative pronoun ing or which - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun or Conjunction? - English Only forum
relative pronoun or for+them... - English Only forum
relative pronoun that - English Only forum
relative pronoun THAT - English Only forum
Relative pronoun THAT - English Only forum
relative pronoun that - English Only forum
Relative pronoun "that" - English Only forum
relative pronoun that - English Only forum
relative pronoun that as an object - English Only forum
Relative pronoun that instead of at which - English Only forum
relative pronoun that vs. which - English Only forum
relative pronoun "that" with that day that - English Only forum
relative pronoun "that". - English Only forum
Relative pronoun to - English Only forum
relative pronoun vs interrogative pronouns vs Noun Clause - English Only forum
relative pronoun vs relative adverb - English Only forum
Relative pronoun vs resumptive pronoun - English Only forum
relative pronoun "where" - English Only forum
Relative pronoun where and the use of prepositions - English Only forum
Relative pronoun where. - English Only forum
relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
relative pronoun which - English Only forum
Relative pronoun "who" - English Only forum
Relative pronoun "Who" and pronoun "We" - English Only forum
Relative pronoun who or which in an academic paper - English Only forum
relative pronoun "who"? - English Only forum
Relative pronoun with each one of - English Only forum
relative pronoun, interrogative pronoun "what" - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun, which or that...can someone verify - English Only forum
Relative pronoun, who vs that - English Only forum
Relative Pronoun: anyone who or anyone that - English Only forum
Relative pronoun: where and prepositions - English Only forum
Relative pronoun:hotel where the fundraising was to take place and <?> the President was to - English Only forum
relative pronoun... - English Only forum
relative pronoun/preposition - English Only forum
Relative pronouns - omitting relative pronoun, not relative adverb - English Only forum
Relative pronouns - Omitting the relative pronoun in defining relative clauses - English Only forum
Relative pronouns - relative pronoun or interrogative pronoun? - English Only forum
Relative pronouns - the usage of the relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
repeated pronoun - English Only forum
repeating personal pronoun - English Only forum
repetition of a personal pronoun - English Only forum
Repetition of a pronoun - English Only forum
Repetition of personal pronoun - English Only forum
repetition of possessive pronoun - English Only forum
Repetition of the pronoun - English Only forum
replacing proper noun with pronoun in possessive? - English Only forum
retro pronoun - English Only forum
right pronoun to be used in "don't judge a person by their looks" - English Only forum
rise in prices such <as> occurred [relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
roads, <some> little more than... [pronoun or adverb?] - English Only forum
Rome is the city <that> I've long wanted to visit [Relative pronoun / relative adverb] - English Only forum
saliva that or saliva which (relative pronoun) - English Only forum
Sam is my cousin not [my] brother. (be noun not [possessive pronoun] noun) - English Only forum
Save you/your time - which pronoun - English Only forum
say hello (for me) vs say hello + personal pronoun (for me) - English Only forum
sense subject & infinitive & for/of + Objective Pronoun/noun - English Only forum
separating noun from its relative pronoun - English Only forum
sequence of tense of relative pronoun - English Only forum
serial verbs - pronoun repetition - English Only forum
"She" as a pronoun for a ship - English Only forum
She <herself> has [reflexive pronoun for emphasis] - English Only forum
Should I leave out the pronoun? - English Only forum
Should the relative pronoun immediately follow the noun? - English Only forum
Should this noun be substituted by a pronoun? - English Only forum
Skipping the pronoun after "therefore" - English Only forum
snow, which was / gallery, their [pronoun, antecedent] - English Only forum
so as a pronoun? - English Only forum
So have + pronoun + been .. or so have been + pronoun? - English Only forum
some as an indefinite pronoun - English Only forum
some difficulties with relative pronoun - English Only forum
Somebody told him the correct pronoun <was/ would be> "they". - English Only forum
someone they know has abused me [omission of subject relative pronoun] - English Only forum
someone, they, their - pronoun - English Only forum
special use of the relative pronoun? - English Only forum
stop you coming down with a cold [stop + object pronoun + gerund] - English Only forum
Structure: for + object pronoun + to + infinitive - English Only forum
Subject + verb + noun/pronoun + past participle - English Only forum
Subject and Object pronoun [Doers and receivers of actions?] - English Only forum
subject and pronoun agreement - English Only forum
Subject or object pronoun? - English Only forum
Subject Pronoun - English Only forum
subject pronoun after "than" in comparisons - English Only forum
Subject Pronoun vs Object Pronoun - English Only forum
Subject pronoun vs subjective pronouns - English Only forum
Subject Pronoun+Infinitive - English Only forum
subject-verb inversion with direct speech if subject is (not personal) pronoun - English Only forum
subject, pronoun - English Only forum
Subject/noun -pronoun agreement - English Only forum
subjective pronoun - English Only forum
subtle pronoun ordering question - English Only forum
successive restrictive and nonrestrictive relative pronoun - English Only forum
Such as + Pronoun - English Only forum
such... as... a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Talking about an infant, what pronoun do we use? - English Only forum
teaches me Russian/ teaches Russian to me [pronoun placement] - English Only forum
tell him <so> [pronoun?] - English Only forum
"THAT" - questionable case - relative pronoun or conjunction - English Only forum
that - relative pronoun - English Only forum
that (a relative pronoun) - English Only forum
That [Demonstrative Pronoun?] - English Only forum
That [relative pronoun] after a comma - English Only forum
that + a relative pronoun - English Only forum
that as a pronoun? - English Only forum
that as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
That as relative pronoun instead of who/which - English Only forum
that or it as a direct object pronoun - English Only forum
that pronoun - English Only forum
that used as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
That: Adjective or Pronoun? - English Only forum
that: relative pronoun or conjunction? - English Only forum
THAT: subordinating conjunction OR relative pronoun? - English Only forum
That's a very nice a coat you're wearing. (Relative pronoun) - English Only forum
that/who as complement in relative pronoun clause - English Only forum
the in front of relative pronoun - English Only forum
the + cardinal number(pronoun) - English Only forum
the antecedent of the relative pronoun "which# - English Only forum
The army is. [Then plural pronoun?] - English Only forum
the best students who/which/(or without pronoun) I have met - English Only forum
The boys who/whom you saw are my nephews( Relative pronoun) - English Only forum
The caged eagle, ..., might look 'as' looked [relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
The correct reflexive pronoun - English Only forum
The current rule <that> permission ...[relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
the fact that vs pronoun + to - English Only forum
The mother in + object pronoun - English Only forum
The omission of subject relative pronoun - English Only forum
the omission of the relative pronoun (subjective case) - English Only forum
the or possessive pronoun - English Only forum
The order between a noun and the pronoun indicating the noun - English Only forum
the order of the pronoun - English Only forum
The possessive pronoun following “which of us” must be in the singular - English Only forum
the possessive pronoun of "it" - English Only forum
The possibility of 'other' alone being used as a pronoun. - English Only forum
the precedent word to a relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
The Problem of Relative Pronoun - English Only forum
the pronoun - English Only forum
The pronoun "I" is not singular. - English Only forum
The pronoun <one> in indirect speech - English Only forum
The pronoun problem - English Only forum
The pronoun problem - English Only forum
The pronoun problem - English Only forum
The pronoun problem - English Only forum
the pronoun problem - English Only forum
The pronoun problem... - English Only forum
The pronoun stands for ... - English Only forum
the relative pronoun 'which' refers to ‘dinner’, for <which> reason - English Only forum
The relative pronoun after "the reason" - English Only forum
the relative pronoun and the position of beside, during - English Only forum
the relative pronoun "that vs. the appositive "that" - English Only forum
The relative pronoun "which" - English Only forum
The right personal pronoun - English Only forum
The role of "those" in relative pronoun clause - English Only forum
The same as adjective or pronoun - English Only forum
"the same" vs "it" as pronoun - English Only forum
The shop <where?> I bought [omission relative pronoun] - English Only forum
The subject pronoun "it" - English Only forum
the tricky pronoun - English Only forum
The usage of proper noun and pronoun - English Only forum
the usage of reflexive pronoun; he simply needed an audience to hear himself - English Only forum
the usage of relative pronoun "that" - English Only forum
The usage of relative pronoun "who" - English Only forum
The Usage of the Relative Pronoun "that" - English Only forum
The use of "own" as an adjective must go after a pronoun? - English Only forum
the use of pronoun - English Only forum
the use of the pronoun ''that'' - English Only forum
The use of the pronoun "It" - English Only forum
the use of the pronoun "it" in specific sentences - English Only forum
their beaks helped pigeons [Antecedent after pronoun] - English Only forum
There - pronoun or expletive? - English Only forum
"There" + is / are = pronoun ? - English Only forum
There is I/me in the room. [pronoun] - English Only forum
There is/Here is and the omission of the relative pronoun - English Only forum
there pronoun? - English Only forum
they pronoun for country - English Only forum
They’re a preposition, adverb, pronoun, article and adjective. - English Only forum
They’re a preposition, adverb, pronoun, article, and adjective, respectively. - English Only forum
Thing - noun or pronoun - English Only forum
think help? [omission of subject relative pronoun] - English Only forum
Third person singular indefinite pronoun. - English Only forum
Those as a relative pronoun: problems as those I faced - English Only forum
To be subject/object pronoun - English Only forum
to be willing + preposition + noun/pronoun - English Only forum
To before a pronoun?? - English Only forum
To bethink + reflexive pronoun. - English Only forum
To have something to pronoun - English Only forum
To which noun the pronoun "their" refers back? - English Only forum
Transformation from simple causative to a noun with a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Tricky 'Relative Pronoun' - English Only forum
tricky pronoun - English Only forum
two clauses modifying one pronoun - English Only forum
two prepositions for one relative pronoun - English Only forum
unaware of noun/pronoun/noun clause - English Only forum
undermine rival leaders he felt... [omission of subject relative pronoun] - English Only forum
underneath >> object pronoun implied? - English Only forum
Usage of pronoun "his"/definite atricle "the" - English Only forum
Usage of pronoun "they" - English Only forum
usage of the relative pronoun "who" - English Only forum
usage of what as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Use "but" after object pronoun - English Only forum
Use of a pronoun instead of which/who or nothing at all? - English Only forum
Use of a relative pronoun - English Only forum
use of conjunction "and", repeated pronoun - English Only forum
Use of "it" as a pronoun - English Only forum
Use of "it" as pronoun for "child" - English Only forum
Use of objective pronoun - English Only forum
Use of possessive (noun, pronoun) - English Only forum
Use of Reflexive Pronoun-Everyone is their own worst critic - English Only forum
use of the pronoun it to avoid a cumbersome repetition - English Only forum
use the pronoun they or repeat? - English Only forum
Using 'as' a quasi relative pronoun - English Only forum
using 'she' as a neutral/general pronoun - English Only forum
Using 'them' as an object pronoun for 'person' -- grammatically correct but awkward. - English Only forum
using a male pronoun to refer to a female - English Only forum
Using a personal pronoun with an inanimate object - English Only forum
Using a pronoun when introducing someone - English Only forum
Using a reflexive pronoun after the verb "prepare" - English Only forum
Using a reflexive pronoun when the subject is omitted - English Only forum
Using do instead of does for a singular pronoun - English Only forum
Using object pronoun+ving - English Only forum
Using "ONE" as a subject pronoun - English Only forum
Using plural with plural pronoun - English Only forum
using pronoun - English Only forum
Using relative pronoun "who" - English Only forum
using the indefinite pronoun 'one' to replace 'language' - English Only forum
using the object pronoun it or not before leave-takings - English Only forum
using the pronoun 'they' for a singular - English Only forum
Using the pronoun “it” for a person - English Only forum
Using "wish" + object pronoun + noun - English Only forum
V-ing or relative pronoun. - English Only forum
varied usages of the pronoun “we”: an interesting linguistic phenomenon - English Only forum
Verb- Pronoun I - English Only forum
verb-pronoun-preposition-/ verb-preposition-pronoun - English Only forum
verbs directly followed by an object pronoun - English Only forum
verify the pronoun "they" - English Only forum
Visit [+ personal pronoun] - English Only forum
Want + object + possessive pronoun - English Only forum
weak definite subject pronoun - English Only forum
What - a pronoun??? - English Only forum
What (pronoun? ) meant was [...] - English Only forum
What as a pronoun - English Only forum
What as a question pronoun or a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
What> as a relative pronoun & object phrase. - English Only forum
what does relative pronoun 'which' represent for? - English Only forum
What does the pronoun 'it' indicate? - English Only forum
what does the pronoun in the sentence indicate? - English Only forum
What does the pronoun "them" refer to? - English Only forum
What does the pronoun "they" refer to? - English Only forum
What does the pronoun, this, mean in this context? - English Only forum
What does this pronoun stand for? - English Only forum
What exercise is to the body, reading is to the mind."what" is relative pronoun or, relative adjecti - English Only forum
"what" followed by pronoun - English Only forum
what is a pronoun referring to - English Only forum
what is the correct pronoun - English Only forum
What is the meaning of "of + possessive pronoun"? - English Only forum
what is the Pronoun Reference - English Only forum
What kind of pronoun is which and that? - English Only forum
what of <pronoun>? - English Only forum
What pronoun do you use for generic roles? - English Only forum
What pronoun does belong to the verb "comprise", in this case? - English Only forum
what pronoun is used for anybody, every body [everybody] - English Only forum
What pronoun should be used when we don't know the sex of ,, - English Only forum
what pronoun should I use.. - English Only forum
What pronoun to use after an "item, item, even item" list? - English Only forum
What relative pronoun is used in non-defining relative clause - English Only forum
what relative pronoun? - English Only forum
What: adjective or pronoun? - English Only forum
What: pronoun or conjunction - English Only forum
What: relative pronoun with implicit antecedent? - English Only forum
What's the function of the reflexive pronoun in the sentence - English Only forum
what's the reflexive pronoun for "country" / "government" - English Only forum
What’s clear is <that> .... [relative pronoun?] - English Only forum
When [relative pronoun or conjunction?] - English Only forum
when answering, noun or pronoun - English Only forum
When is it possible to miss out the personal pronoun ? - English Only forum
When "such as" serves as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
When "those" used as object, can the following relative pronoun "that" left out? - English Only forum
When to place the preposition before the relative pronoun? - English Only forum
When to use pronoun "it" ? - English Only forum
Where - relative pronoun - English Only forum
where -relative pronoun - English Only forum
where one is [pronoun "one"] - English Only forum
Whether to use a reflexive pronoun or not - English Only forum
which / relative pronoun - English Only forum
Which noun does this pronoun refer to? - English Only forum
which pronoun can I use for States? - English Only forum
Which pronoun should I use, it, that, or this? - English Only forum
which pronoun to use: he or she - English Only forum
which pronoun? on or in? - English Only forum
Which relative pronoun can we use after "the only?" - English Only forum
which relative pronoun is correct? - English Only forum
which what that (pronoun) - English Only forum
which, pronoun - English Only forum
Which(relative pronoun) at the beginning - English Only forum
who -- as an interrogative pronoun or a relative pronoun - English Only forum
who [interrogative pronoun] + who [relative pronoun] - English Only forum
Who was it <that> said [Cleft sentence: omission of relative pronoun] - English Only forum
Who/whose/what/etc. + to be + noun/pronoun? - English Only forum
Whoever as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Whom as relative pronoun - English Only forum
"Whom" instead of a pronoun - English Only forum
whom... objective pronoun? - English Only forum
why leave out the definite article and the pronoun in title - English Only forum
why as a relative pronoun - English Only forum
Why does the pronoun ‘I’ take plural verbs? - English Only forum
Why is a objective pronoun used instead of a personal pronoun? - English Only forum
Why is the verb singular with distributive pronoun neither? - English Only forum
why not using relative pronoun? - English Only forum
Why people comment in third person pronoun on Youtube? - English Only forum
wish-pronoun-would- verb. - English Only forum
With or Without a Pronoun - English Only forum
Without + pronoun - English Only forum
women possess it (antecedent of the pronoun) more really than men - English Only forum
would you like you if you meet you/yourself? [Reflexive Pronoun?] - English Only forum
Wrong use of a relative pronoun? - English Only forum
You cannot use a pronoun and 'be' after an adjunct - English Only forum
Ze (pronoun) - dictionary additions forum
Zero Relative Pronoun + Preposition at the end - English Only forum
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