The pronoun "What" is used in the question "What's the soup of the day?" It is an interrogative pronoun used to inquire about the identity or nature of something, in this case, the soup that is being served as the special of the day.
Transitive verbs require a direct object to complete the meaning of the verb and express a complete idea. In the sentence "John has a message for his mother," the transitive verb "has" is followed by the direct object "a message," which completes the meaning of the verb.
In the sentence "Sharee gave her mother a pencil," the direct object is "pencil." It is the object that is being given by Stephanie.
The sentence "Ray had walked all the way home before his mum showed up" uses the past perfect tense. The verb form "had walked" is in the past perfect tense, indicating an action that was completed before another past action.
Actually, in the sentence "Mango is the name of it," there is no pronoun. The word "it" is a pronoun, but in this particular sentence, it is being used as a determiner rather than a pronoun. It is specifying that the name being referred to is "Mango."
The verb in the sentence "Mike has a message for his mother" is "has." It is a form of the verb "to have," indicating possession or ownership.