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Little words – Big problems Pronouns Click on speaker icon for sound
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What are personal pronouns? Personal Pronouns represent people, places and things [nouns] –Subject Pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we, they) –Object pronouns (me, you, him, her, it, us, them) What is the difference between a subject pronoun and an object pronoun? –Subject pronouns usually come before the verb and object pronouns usually come after. Ex: He and I are him and her in the picture.
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Why do people make subject and object pronoun mistakes? #1 compound subjects + objects Poor: Tom and her drove to phoenix. Poor: Mom asked Tim and I to go. [To fix – remove the other subject or object and match the pronoun with the verb.] Better: Tom and she drove to phoenix. Better: Mom asked Tim and me to go.
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Another reason for subject and object pronoun mistakes subject pronouns with linking verbs Poor: Are you certain it was him who stole the car? [If a pronoun renames the subject and comes just after a linking verb– the pronoun will be in the subject form too – It is I, This is she, It was he.] Better: Are you certain it was he who stole the car?
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Object Pronouns Sometimes when you have two objects and use pronouns, it is easy to make a mistake. Poor: Bill talked to Kathy and I this morning [To fix this error, remove the other object and say this sentence to yourself. You’ll hear the right answer] Better: Bill talked to Kathy and me this morning
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The word ‘between’ Between – whenever you use between, you must use an object pronoun Poor: This conversation is between him and I. Better: This conversation is between him and me.
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Problems with reflexives Intensive pronouns are for emphasis. Ex: The president signed this himself. [The himself is to emphasize that the president signed it and not someone else] Reflexive pronouns show an action was performed by someone on herself / himself or itself. Ex: The child hurt herself when she fell. [The herself shows that no one else hurt her – falling was her fault] Problems with intensive and reflexive pronouns occur in compound subjects + objects. Poor: Betty and myself baked the pie. Or The pie was baked by Betty and myself. [Remove the other subject or object to fix] Better: Betty and I baked the pie. Or The pie was baked by Betty and me. *Note: There are no such words as hisself, theirself, or theirselves. Only himself an themselves are correct.
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Problems with pronoun reference Pronouns need to clearly refer to someone, some place or something. Pronouns need to agree in number with their antecedents. Poor: Mary picked up 2 plates and a bowl and put it in the cupboard. [Does the antecedent match pronoun?] Better: Mary picked up 2 plates and a bowl and put them in the cupboard. One reference problem is no antecedent Poor: I asked for $5, but they said no. [The problem is - Who are they?] Better: I asked for $5, but my parents said no. OR I asked my parents for $5, but they said no. Another pronoun reference problem is that there may be 2 possible antecedents. Poor: When Mary ran into Barbara, she dropped the books. [The problem is - Who dropped the books?] Better: When Mary ran into Barbara, Mary dropped the books.
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Indefinite pronouns Some indefinite pronouns are plural (both, few, many, several) while -one, - body, - thing pronouns (such as everyone, somebody, nothing) as well as either, neither, and each are singular. Poor: Several of the students fainted when viewing his/her grades. Better: Several of the students fainted when viewing their grades. Poor: Everyone in the class brought their blue book. Better: Everyone in the class brought his/her blue book. [Remember only plural pronouns can be followed by they or their- singular pronouns must be followed by he, she or it.]
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The trouble with this & which Make sure you can clearly show this what? When using ‘this’ in a sentence, follow it with a noun or replace this with a noun. Ex: People dislike the high price of insurance. We need to organize a group to solve this. (this what? this problem or insurance inflation) Which is used primarily as a choice in a question– which one? If you use which without the question mark, you need to change your sentence. (Sometimes you can switch which for that or just take which out) –Poor: The restaurant, which I like, is unfortunately closed. –Better: The restaurant I like is unfortunately closed. –Poor: The Vatican is very extensive, which makes it hard to see in only a few hours. –Better: The Vatican is very extensive. That makes it hard to see in only a few hours.
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Don’t switch point of view with pronouns Poor: I don’t like to diet because you suffer too much and eventually gain the weight back. [Keep the same view – I to I – otherwise it sounds like my friend suffers when I diet.] Better: I don’t like to diet because I suffer too much and eventually gain the weight back.
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