Want this question answered?
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
The team members wanted to improve their skills.
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
no
"The boys want their dessert now."Yes, the possessive adjective 'their' agrees in number with the plural noun 'boys'.The pronoun 'their' is the plural form used to describe a noun belonging to a plural noun (or two or more nouns).
The title of the play, "Romeo and Juliet," should be italicized in the sentence.
Novels are typically italicized when mentioned in a sentence or paragraph. However, if you are hand-writing the title, you would underline it.
The title of the play, "Romeo and Juliet," should be italicized in the sentence: The students attended a production of Romeo and Juliet.
Yes, for instance. The conflict in Sri Lanka has its antecedents in the ancient cultural differences between the Tamil/Hindu population in the north and the Sinhalese/Buhdist population in the south.
I graduated cum laude < italicized]
The sentence with two antecedents is: "Abe and Peter gave their dog a bath." The nouns "Abe" and "Peter" are the antecedents of the pronoun "their", a possessive adjective describing the noun dog as belonging to both of them.
yes