"She" is a pronoun replacing a person’s name.
It acts as the subject of the sentence.
"They are going to the park."
"They" is a subject pronoun used for more than one person.
It correctly matches the verb "are," which is plural.
Why the others would be incorrect (if given):
He → singular (would need "is": He is going…)
Me → object pronoun, not used as the subject
I → singular (would need "am": I am going…)
The correct sentence is: "Sarah looked at herself in the mirror before leaving."
"Herself" is the appropriate reflexive pronoun used when the subject and object are the same person.
"Dog" is a singular animal, so the reflexive pronoun "itself" is used.
"The dog hurt itself while playing." is grammatically correct.
Herself = female
Himself = male
Itself = animal
This is our house, not yours.
This is because "our" is a possessive pronoun
It is used to indicate ownership by a group that includes the speaker,
And it functions as a determiner in this context.
Third-person narrative uses pronouns like he, she, they to tell the story from an outside perspective.
"I" is a first-person pronoun, used only in first-person narration.
"Theirs" is a possessive pronoun that replaces “their [noun]” without repeating the noun.
Use “theirs” when the noun is implied (e.g., “the favorite activity”).
Use "which" for animals or things in non-defining relative clauses.
In this sentence, "which I loved dearly" refers to the dog — making "which" the correct relative pronoun.
"This" is a demonstrative pronoun used to point out something specific — in this case, the situation.
Demonstrative pronouns include this, that, these, those and replace nouns in context.
"Which" is used when choosing from a known or limited set (like specific paintings).
The sentence is asking to identify one from several, so "Which" fits correctly.
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