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Usage - Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

A pronoun refers to a noun and must agree with its antecedent in person, number, and gender. The antecedent is the noun that the pronoun refers back to. There are several rules that determine whether a pronoun should be singular or plural based on its antecedent, such as whether the antecedent is singular or plural, composed of multiple nouns joined by and or or, an indefinite pronoun, or a collective noun. Following these rules helps ensure pronoun-antecedent agreement.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views7 pages

Usage - Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

A pronoun refers to a noun and must agree with its antecedent in person, number, and gender. The antecedent is the noun that the pronoun refers back to. There are several rules that determine whether a pronoun should be singular or plural based on its antecedent, such as whether the antecedent is singular or plural, composed of multiple nouns joined by and or or, an indefinite pronoun, or a collective noun. Following these rules helps ensure pronoun-antecedent agreement.

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Whil Wilson
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Pronoun A pronoun is a substitute for a noun.

It refers to a person, place, thing, feeling, or quality but does not refer to it by its name. The pronoun in the following sample sentence is bolded. The critique of Plato's Republic was written from a contemporary point of view. It was an in-depth analysis of Plato's opinions about possible governmental forms. Antecedent An antecedent is the word, phrase, or clause to which a pronoun refers, understood by the context. The antecedent in the following sample sentence is bolded. The critique of Plato's Republic was written from a contemporary point of view. It was an in-depth analysis of Plato's opinions about possible governmental forms. While the pronouns I and you can be replaced by nouns, the context of a sentence does not always require the nouns to make clear to which persons I and you refer. However, the third person pronouns (he, she, it, they) almost always derive their meaning from their antecedents or the words for which they stand. Remember that pronouns in the third person communicate nothing unless the reader knows what they mean: It is the best source available. What source is that? Agreement A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in three ways:

Person refers to the quality of being. Number is the quality that distinguishes between singular (one entity) and plural (numerous entities). Gender is the quality that distinguishes the entities as masculine or feminine.

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Usage - Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement


A pronoun is a word used to stand for (or take the place of) a noun. A word can refer to an earlier noun or pronoun in the sentence. Example:

We do not talk or write this way. Automatically, we replace the noun Lincoln's with a pronoun. More naturally, we say

The pronoun his refers back to President Lincoln. President Lincoln is the ANTECEDENT for the pronoun his. An antecedent is a word for which a pronoun stands. (ante = "before") The pronoun must agree with its antecedent in number. Rule: A singular pronoun must replace a singular noun; a plural pronoun must replace a plural noun. Thus, the mechanics of the sentence above look like this:

Here are nine pronoun-antecedent agreement rules. These rules are related to the rules found in subject-verb agreement. 1. A phrase or clause between the subject and verb does not change the number of the antecedent. Example:

2. Indefinite pronouns as antecedents

Singular indefinite pronoun antecedents take singular pronoun referents.

Example:

Plural indefinite pronoun antecedents require plural referents. PLURAL: several, few, both, many Example:

Some indefinite pronouns that are modified by a prepositional phrase may be either singular or plural. EITHER SINGULAR OR PLURAL: some, any, none, all, most

Examples:

Sugar is uncountable; therefore, the sentence has a singular referent pronoun.

Jewelry is uncountable; therefore, the sentence has a singular referent pronoun.

Examples:

Marbles are countable; therefore, the sentence has a plural referent pronoun.

Jewels are countable; therefore, the sentence has a plural referent pronoun.

3. Compound subjects joined by and always take a plural referent. Example:

4. With compound subjects joined by or/nor, the referent pronoun agrees with the antecedent closer to the pronoun. Example #1 (plural antecedent closer to pronoun):

Example #2 (singular antecedent closer to pronoun):

Note: Example #1, with the plural antecedent closer to the pronoun, creates a smoother sentence than example #2, which forces the use of the singular "his or her."

5. Collective Nouns (group, jury, crowd, team, etc.) may be singular or plural, depending on meaning.

In this example, the jury is acting as one unit; therefore, the referent pronoun is singular.

In this example, the jury members are acting as twelve individuals; therefore, the referent pronoun is plural.

In this example, the jury members are acting as twelve individuals; therefore, the referent pronoun is plural.

6. Titles of single entities. (books, organizations, countries, etc.) take a singular referent. EXAMPLES:

7. Plural form subjects with a singular meaning take a singular referent. (news, measles, mumps, physics, etc) EXAMPLE:

8. Every or Many a before a noun or a series of nouns requires a singular referent. EXAMPLES:

9. The number of vs A number of before a subject:

The number of is singular.

A number of is plural.

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