Common errors with pronoun usage

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SUBJECT–VERB AGREEMENT
Advertisements

Pronouns.
APA Style Grammar. Verbs  Use active rather than passive voice, select tense and mood carefully  Poor: The survey was conducted in a controlled setting.
Pronouns Brenham Writing Room Created by D. Herring.
Essential Agreements Making Your Sentences Work: Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement.
Chapter 4 Basics of English Grammar
PRONOUNS LESSON 1. WHAT IS A PRONOUN? Pronouns take the place of nouns to name persons, places, things, or ideas.
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement. Pronoun A pronoun is a substitute for a noun. It refers to a person, place, thing, feeling, or quality but does not refer.
PRONOUNS English 3 CP.
Pronouns.
Pronoun Agreement Quiz
ACT English Test Prep Lesson 5 Hanyang University GAC Instructor: Samuel Kim.
The Art of Agreement: Correct Pronoun-Antecedent Pairing
Pronouns What are they?.
Pronoun - Antecedent Agreement A pronoun must agree in number (either singular or plural) with its antecedent (what it refers to in the text). Indefinite.
Ch. 10, Rude’s Technical Editing Important Grammar & Usage Points.
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement What are pronouns and antecedents? A pronoun works to take the place of a noun or noun phrase. For example: The girl loves.
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement. Why is P-A agreement important? I got this sentence while grading college essays: “Ellen bought Sharon some cookies. She.
Pronoun/ Antecedent Agreement
 A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns or pronouns.  The word that the pronoun refers to is called the antecedent.  There are.
 Noun  Person, place, thing, idea  Common: begins with lower case letter (city)  Proper: begins with capital letter (Detroit)  Possessive: shows ownership.
Chapter 4 Basics of English Grammar Business Communication Copyright 2010 South-Western Cengage Learning.
Level 1: The Parts of Speech
GRAMMAR: ENGLISH II Fall ) Subject-verb agreement 2) Noun, verb, & prepositional phrase 3) Pronoun-antecedent agreement.
PRONOUNS!! A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun or another pronoun.
Pronouns and its their antecedents Agreement Part 2.
© 2006 SOUTH-WESTERN EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING 11th Edition Hulbert & Miller Effective English for Colleges Chapter 2 PRONOUNS.
Pronouns replace nouns Pronouns come in many different varieties.
Ch Mary Ellen Guffey, Business English, 8e Objectives Make personal pronouns agree with their antecedents in number and gender. Understand the.
Class Notes Pronouns © Copyright Academic Year , by M. Baltsas. All Rights Reserved.
Parts of Speech Nouns, Pronouns, and Adjectives. Noun A person, place, thing or idea. A person, place, thing or idea. –Types of nouns: Collective, common,
PRONOUNS. Unit 6 Pronouns What are pronouns and antecedents? What are pronouns and antecedents? I. Pronouns & Antecedents A. Pronoun – a word that replaces.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun.
Unit 8 Pronouns.
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Mrs. Dianne Cline 7th grade GRC Oak Mountain Middle School
Keys to Understanding the Chapter
Jeopardy Start Pronouns Word Bank Singular, Plural Nominative, Objective, Compound, Interrogative, Relative Demonstrative, Indefinite, Distributive.
Pronouns. Cases of Personal Pronouns Case/exam.UseExampleCondition Nominative (subject case) I, we, you, he, she, it, they Subject Predicate pronoun We.
Pronoun Case Her smacked he.. Determining which form of a pronoun to use is a matter of determining how the pronoun is functioning in the sentence and.
Pronouns and Antecedents. Review Pronoun A word that substitutes for a noun Types: Personal Pronouns (specific persons/things): I, me, you, she, her,
Pronouns replace nouns Pronouns come in many different varieties.
AHSGE Review.  A word that replaces a noun  A pronoun should have one antecedent  An antecedent the noun that is replaced later in the sentence by.
Unit 1 Language Parts of Speech. Nouns A noun is a word that names a person, place, thing, or idea Common noun - general name Proper noun – specific name.
Pronouns 11 English Grammar Review. Nominative Case The nominative case of a personal pronoun is used when the pronoun functions as a subject or a predicate.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that is used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns. Ex. he, his, they.
Pronouns come in many different varieties. Pronouns take the place of nouns.
Nouns and Pronouns Today we are going to focus on one of these two grammar elements-Pronouns FACT Nouns and pronouns are the only two parts of speech that.
AND TYPES OF PRONOUNS PRONOUN-ANTECEDENT AGREEMENT.
Subject-Verb Agreement. NUMBER — the form a word takes to indicate whether the word is SINGULAR or PLURAL.  SINGULAR — a word that refers to one person,
PRONOUNS. Pronouns A pronoun is a word used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns. Example: Ask Dan if Dan has done Dan’s homework. Ask Dan if he.
By: Ella Blowers Jessy Gonzales Writer’s Reference: pages
Pronoun Antecedent Agreement. Pronoun A pronoun is the word that takes the place of a noun and functions in the same ways that nouns do.  The critique.
How Can You Make this Simpler? The boys were excited about the boys’ first day at camp. The boys got lost and wandered around the huge lake. The boys asked.
Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Wednesday, Jan. 9 Thursday, Jan. 10.
Pronouns as Subjects (p in The Little, Brown Compact Handbook) With indefinite pronouns, use a singular or plural verb as appropriate Most indefinite.
Nouns and Pronouns. Nouns Common Noun – person, place, thing, or idea – Ex: woman, city, car Proper Noun – particular person, place, thing, or idea –
Agreement, case, and reference. What is a pronoun? A pronoun can replace a noun or another pronoun. We use pronouns to make our sentences less cumbersome.
COMMUNICATING IN THE WORKPLACE Sixth Canadian Edition
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Grammar: Issues with Agreement
Pronoun Antecedent Agreement
Intensive, and Relative
Pronouns Pronoun: a word used in place of one or more nouns
By: Mrs. Smith St. Mary’s Middle School English
Pronouns.
Class Notes Pronouns © Copyright Academic Year , by M. Baltsas. All Rights Reserved.
Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement
Pronouns Cases and Usage Issues.
Pronoun Reference and Antecedent Agreement
Presentation transcript:

Common errors with pronoun usage Pronouns Common errors with pronoun usage

What is a pronoun? Pronouns are word that substitute for nouns. Often, a pronoun refers to an antecedent in the sentence. An antecedent is a word that comes before the pronoun in the sentence; however, not necessarily directly before. The boy (antecedent) left his (pronoun) favorite toy car on the bus this afternoon.

4 Pronoun problems Pronoun-antecedent agreement (singular vs. plural) Pronoun reference (clarity) Pronoun case (personal pronoun such a I vs. me, she vs. her) Pronoun case (who vs. whom)

Pronoun-antecedent agreement A pronoun and its antecedent always agree when they are both singular or both plural SINGULAR (antecedent) (pronoun) The teacher finished her lesson plans early on Tuesday. “Teacher” and “her” are both singular and match one another appropriately PLURAL (antecedent) (pronoun) The teachers lined up their kids when recess was over. “Teachers” and “their” are both plural and match one another appropriately Indefinite pronouns such as everyone, anybody, or nobody are treated as singular and should take the singular pronouns of “he or she” not “their”

Pronoun-antecedent agreement Generic nouns such as student, runner, lawyer are treated as singular. Collective nouns such as jury, committee, audience, class are treated as singular when spoken about as a unit, and plural when spoken about as the individuals in the group. As a unit: The planning committee granted its permission to build. As individuals: The committee put their signatures on the document. Compound antecedents joined by and are treated as plural; compound antecedents joined by or are treated as singular Julia and Nathan moved to the mountains, where they built a log cabin. Either Mark or Aaron should receive first prize for his sculpture.

Pronoun reference A pronoun should clearly refer to an antecedent. If it is unclear, the pronoun will be ambiguous, implied, vague, or indefinite. Ambiguous Pronoun could refer to two or more antecedents Ambiguous: When Gloria set the pitcher on the glass-topped table, it broke. Unambiguous: When Gloria set it on the glass-topped table, the pitcher broke. Implied Pronoun cannot refer to an implied antecedent; it must be present in the sentence Incorrect: After braiding Anna’s hair, Sue decorate them with ribbons. Correct: After braiding Anna’s hair, Sue decorated the braids with ribbons.

Pronoun reference Vague and Indefinite Specific antecedents should be referenced, not whole ideas or indefinite persons not specifically mentioned Incorrect: In large cities, we are finding ourselves victims of serious crimes. We learn to accept this with minor complaints. Correct: In large cities, we are finding ourselves victims of serious crimes. We learn to accept this fate with minor complaints.

Pronoun case Always identify which case a pronoun falls under in order to use it properly: subjective, objective, or possessive Subjective case: functions as a subject or subject complement (I, we, you, he/she/it, they). Objective case: functions as a direct object, an indirect object, or the object of a preposition (me, us, you, him/her/it, them). Possessive case: modifies a gerund (verb form ending –ing that functions as a noun) or a gerund phrase (me, our, your, his/her/its, their)

Who vs. whom The similarities: The differences: Relative pronouns used to introduce subordinate clauses (clauses that have a subject and a verb cannot stand alone) Interrogative pronouns used to open questions The differences: Who can be used only for subjects and subject complements Whom can be used only for objects

Who vs. Whom relative pronouns The case of a relative pronoun is determined by its function within the subordinate clause Hint: Find the verb of the clause to discover the function. If the pronoun is performing the action of the verb, use who. If the pronoun is receiving the action of the verb or is functioning as the object of as preposition, use whom. When medicine is scarce and expensive, physicians must give it to whoever has the best chance of surviving. Whoever is the subject of the verb has The tutor whom I was assigned to was very supportive. Whom is the object of the preposition to

Who vs. whom interrogative pronouns The case of an interrogative pronoun is determine by its function within the question. Who is responsible for this mess on the kitchen floor? Who is the subject of the verb is Whom did the committee select as interim president of the school board? Whom is the direct object of the verb did select Hint: Reword the sentence to discover the direct object: The committee did select whom as the interim president of the school board?