A pronoun co-reference is when a pronoun in a sentence refers back to another noun or pronoun previously mentioned in the text. This helps avoid repetition and maintain clarity in writing by connecting related ideas.
A remote reference pronoun refers to a noun or pronoun that appears earlier in the text, but is not adjacent to the pronoun that refers to it. These pronouns are used to avoid repetition and maintain clarity in writing.
The unclear pronoun reference in the sentence "In California they grow the finest onions" occurs with the pronoun "they," which does not have a clear antecedent. It is unclear who or what "they" refers to in this context, creating confusion for the reader.
divided pronoun reference
A divided pronoun reference occurs when there are two or more nouns in a sentence that a pronoun could replace, making it difficult to know which noun the pronoun is replacing.Example:Mary and Susan went to her father's store.Whose father has the store?Clearer would be:Mary went to her father's store with Susan.
When there is confusion about which antecedent a pronoun replaces, it is called an unclear pronoun antecedent reference.
unclear pronoun reference.
To correct an ambiguous pronoun reference, you can:repeat the antecedentplace the pronoun nearer the antecedentrewrite the entire sentenceinsert an intensive pronoun after the ambiguous pronoun
The sentence is an example of an improper pronoun-antecedent reference. It is not clear who the pronoun 'his' refers to, Jim or Don.The sentence must be rewritten to make the reference clear.
The term for this is a faulty reference. In good writing, the pronoun and its antecedent are always clearly related, and it is easy to discern the relationship between the two words.Using the correct pronoun is called pronoun-antecedent agreement.
The pronouns in the sentence are: most, that, and who.None of these have a vague pronoun reference. The reference for each of these pronouns are:most - an indefinite pronoun that takes the place of a noun for an exact number of students.that - a demonstrative pronoun which refers to 'classes' that are asynchronous.who - a relative pronoun that introduces a relative clause that gives information about its antecedent 'students'.
hinahanap nga namin tas tatanong nyo samin SHONGA LNG TE
The vague pronoun reference: does the pronoun 'it' refer to the photocopier or the toner.Examples of rewording the sentence:From the photocopier, John took the toner and threw it away.John took the photocopier toner and threw it away.