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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."
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The team members wanted to improve their skills.
"I told Sarah and her brother that she could come with us to the party."
"The cats played with their toys." "The dogs wagged their tails happily." In both sentences, the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedent ("cats" and "dogs" respectively), making them grammatically correct.
pronoun
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An italicized word is a word (or a group of words) that is slanted to stand out from the rest of the text.Example: When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train.The pronoun he takes the place of the noun Georgein the second part of the sentence. The pronoun he and its antecedent George are italicized to stand out from the text.When a title of is used in text, the title is supposed to be identifiable from the rest of the text. Sometimes quote marks are used to identify a title, for example: "Titanic" was a great movie.But sometimes the title is italicized: Titanic was a great movie.Often a lesson is written using italicized words that the student can easily locate in the text, for example:Which of the italicized words in the following sentence is the pronoun and which is the antecedent:When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train.
He is not a teacher. is a sentence with the pronoun he , while You are not a teacher has the pronoun you.
He is a pronoun
"In the sentence below, identify the pronoun and its antecedent?"In this sentence the pronoun is its.The antecedent for the possessive adjective its is the noun pronoun.
The pronoun 'which' is the interrogative pronoun that introduces the sentence as a question.
The pronouns in the sentence are what (an interrogative pronoun) and you (a personal pronoun).
"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 subject is the word (noun or pronoun) that the sentence is about.
There is no pronoun in that sentence
The pronoun in the sentence is "you." It is a second person singular pronoun referring to the person receiving the book.
The pronoun in the sentence is you.The pronoun 'you' is a personalpronoun in the secondperson (the one spoken to).In this sentence, the pronoun 'you' is singular(based on the context of the sentence), but the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural.