yes
"Students in online classes have to be organized to keep up with their assignments."The pronoun in the sentence is 'their', a possessive adjective. The pronoun 'their' describes something that belongs to two or more people, 'assignments'.An antecedent is the noun or pronoun that the pronoun replaces. The pronoun 'their' is taking the place of a noun for two or more people, the plural noun 'students'.The noun 'classes' is not the antecedent because the assignments do not belong to the classes, the assignments belong to the students (the student's assignments; their assignments).
"He did not comply with work instructions from his supervisor, and consequently, his assignments were incorrectly completed?"
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."
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.
An antecedent is an English term. For example, in the following sentence, the boy is an antecedent of who.The boy who pitched the game is worn out.Ask yourself: Who is who?Who is the boy.
Antecedents are those which come before. The term often refers to ancestors, although it can have other meanings as well. If a person is said to have ambiguous antecedents, it would mean that you really don't know what to think about that person's ancestry.
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.
Our teacher gives out homework assignments as though they are a sentence.
The pronoun is it.The antecedent is goal.
I'd organized this event!
Arranged, directed, organized, or in the following sentence handled: "I handled the situation on my own"
A a sentence with two (or more) antecedents will use a plural pronoun to take the place of all of the antecedents. Example:Red, yellow, and blue are primary colors; they can be mixed to make almost any color.When Jack and Jill finish their homework, I have lunch ready for them.