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Pronoun/ Antecedent Agreement
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Review: What’s a Pronoun?
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
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What’s an Antecedent? 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.
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Rule #1 A phrase or clause between the subject and verb does not change the number of the antecedent. Example:
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Rule #2 Singular indefinite pronoun antecedents take singular pronoun referents.
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Rule #3 Compound subjects joined by and always take a plural referent. Example:
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Rule #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):
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Rule #5 Collective Nouns (group, jury, crowd, team, etc.) are singular.
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