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Pronouns 1 Pronoun Usage A noun is a word used to name a(n) person, place, thing, group, or idea. A pronoun takes the place of a noun. The pronoun’s antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces. Note: an antecedent is something that comes before something else. For example, a history class may discuss the antecedents of the Civil War or the Great Depression. In grammar, an antecedent is the noun that has come before the pronoun, and the pronoun refers back to it. antecedent pronoun Cooper is my toy poodle. He thrives on playing fetch. antecedents pronoun John and Jeff are teammates. They have been friends since childhood. Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement Pronouns must agree with their antecedents in number, as shown above. Problems in agreement may occur if the pronoun is indefinite. INDEFINITE PRONOUNS Singular each everyone either everybody neither no one one no body anyone anybody someone somebody Plural both few several many Sometimes singular / Sometimes plural some any none all most Incorrect Each of the students brought their rough draft to class. Singular plural Several of the boys brought his books. plural singular Correct Each of the students brought his or her rough draft to class. Singular Singular Several of the boys brought their books. plural plural Some of the students have their schedules for next semester. Some of the crop is on its way to market. Plural plural singular singular Note that in the example “Some of the crop is on its way to market,” the word crop refers to a group or an amount that is thought of as one unit and is, therefore, singular. Pronoun Reference A pronoun’s antecedent must be clear. Problems in usage occur when either there is no antecedent or the antecedent is unclear. Note the following examples. Indefinite use of you, it, or they Incorrect They say that you only live once. Correct People may say that you only live once. An old saying states that you only live once. Incorrect Doctors say that you cannot catch a cold from cold, rainy weather. Correct Doctors say that people cannot catch a cold from cold, rainy weather. Pronouns 2 Implied pronoun reference Incorrect John is taking premed. courses, for he hopes to be one in the future. [Taking premed. courses implies (or suggests) that John wants to be a doctor; however, the term doctor has not been supplied as an antecedent.] Correct John is taking premed. courses, for he hopes to be a doctor in the future. Incorrect JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings is a popular novel. He invented a language, Elvish, which he uses periodically in his tales. [JRR Tolkien’s is a proper adjective, not a noun which can serve as an antecedent.] Correct JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings is a popular novel. Tolkien invented a language, Elvish, which he uses periodically in his tales. Ambiguous pronoun reference Incorrect After the president and his assistant planned a new strategy, he called a conference. [Who called the conference, the president or his assistant? The antecedent is ambiguous, or uncertain.] Correct After the president and his assistant planned a new strategy, the president called a conference. Broad pronoun reference Incorrect Cindy decided to go to Africa for a summer internship, which worried her parents. [What worried her parents? Not just Cindy or Africa, but the broad idea of her decision to go to Africa for a summer internship.] Correct [Reword the sentence so that which is not used.] Cindy’s decision to go to Africa for a summer internship worried her parents. Cindy decided to go to Africa for a summer internship. Her decision worried her parents. When Cindy decided to go Africa for a summer internship, her parents became worried. Titles as Antecedents Incorrect Pride and Prejudice This is a favorite novel by Jane Austin. [A noun should be used in a paragraph before a pronoun is used for it. For proper nouns, use an authors full name first; thereafter his or her last name may be used in a paragraph and then replaced by a pronoun.] Correct Pride and Prejudice Pride and Prejudice is a favorite novel by Jane Austin. Redundancy Avoid unnecessary pronouns. Incorrect Correct My father, he told me to finish my work. My father told me to finish my work. In the book, it says ... The book says Pronouns 3 Usage of Proper Pronoun Case PRONOUN CASE Subjective (nominative) case singular 1st I you he, she, it who, whoever 2nd 3rd Objective case Possessive Case plural singular plural we you they me us you you him, her, it them whom, whomever singular plural my, mine our,* ours your, yours your, yours his,** her,* hers, its**their,* theirs * used as adjectives ** used as pronouns or adjectives Use subjective case pronouns as subjects (s) and predicate nominatives (pn). Predicate nominatives follow a linking verb (be verbs- am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been) and rename or describe the subject. They are in the same case asa the subject because the sentence can be inverted. Note the following example: s pn s pn John is the team captain. The team captain is John. s pn pn I am going home for summer. This is she. It was I who did the work. s pn Jeffrey and I will be at the reception. The chiefs for the new restaurant are Geogio and I. s s When Sam and I finish, we will take a vacation. [Note: I is the subject of a dependent clause, and we is the subject of the independent clause.) s The scholarship went to the student who had wrote the best essay. [Who is the subject of the dependant clause.] Use objective case pronouns as objects, such as an object of a preposition (op), direct object (do), or indirect objects (io). A direct object comes after an action verb (av) and receives the action. (Ask Subject + verb + who or what to find the direct object [John threw the ball.], or s+v+what, to whom to find the indirect object [John threw Tom the ball.]) Note that all of these examples involve pronouns that either follow action verbs or are in prepositional phrases. s av do John threw the ball. (John threw what? The ball; ball is the direct object.) s av io do John threw Tom the ball. (John threw the ball to whom? Tom; Tom is the indirect object. Note that an indirect object will come before the direct object) av io do Please give her the papers. av do op Mary helped him with the report. The gift is for her. av io do s op After Mary showed him kindness, he reciprocated by being kind to her. [In the dependant clause, him is an indirect object; in the independent clause, he is a subject and her is an object of the preposition.] op Suzanna is the girl for whom Richard wrote the sonnet. [In the dependant clause, whom is the object of the preposition.] Pronouns 4 Appositives are in the same case as the word they rename. op ap of op The grant was awarded to the winners, Susan and her. s ap of s The debate team’s captains, Sam and she, are excused from class on Friday. Note: If the pronoun is part of a compound element, try it be itself. op s The party is for Susan and me. The party is for me. John and I will be there. I will be there. Memorize- between you and me between him and her Eliptical clauses are often used in a comparison and leave out understood words. They are introduced by than or as...as. To choose the correct word, one must first complete the clause. The debate helped the senator more than (she, her). av do The debate helped the senator more than the debate helped her. s s Brian is as tall as (he, him). Brian is as tall as he is tall. Possessive pronouns Possessive pronouns do not use apostrophes. Possessive pronouns are used before gerunds. Remember that gerunds are –ing verbs used as nouns; thus they are used as subjects, direct objects, or objects of prepositions. s My swimming was the door to my getting an athletic scholarship. op Samantha was appalled at his running from responsibility. Reflexive pronouns Reflexive pronouns are used to refer back to a subject. For example, The young boy did the project himself, without any parental help. Do not use reflexive pronoun when a personal pronoun should be used. Incorrect The conflict was between John and myself. Correct The conflict was between John and me. Note: Himself and themselves are reflexive pronouns; hisself and theirselves are not words.