This is an extremely vague question. What specifically are you asking and what is it in reference to?
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.
No there is not. There is only one vague reference to Israel in the Hieroglyphics, and it does not mention any details at all. It was not uncommon for ancient Egyptians to avoid mentioning their political failures in writing.
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'.
There is no vague pronoun reference in that sentence.The pronouns in the sentence are:which - a relative pronoun that introduces the relative clause;their - a possessive adjective 'their' refers back to 'girls'.
You are still able to use both for the time being in the city and surrounds once myki is launched, if this is what your vague question is in reference to.
This may be a vague reference to the fact that there are roughly 2 of Venus's "solar days" in one Venus year.
Motion it the change of an object over time relative to its reference point. that is called a reference point.
The best way to correct a vague pronoun reference is to clearly identify the noun that the pronoun is referring to. You can do this by rephrasing the sentence to include the specific noun or by adding more context to clarify the reference. Additionally, using specific pronouns like "it," "he," or "she" instead of generic ones like "this," "that," or "it" can help eliminate ambiguity.
your question is a but vague. the answer refers to the Newtonian aspect of it: if you have a reference point, then you can measure the difference between the two places of that object. taking time into account, you can derive its velocity and acceleration rate. matar
No, there is no vague pronoun. The only antecedent for the personal pronoun 'they' and the possessive adjective 'their' is the noun 'Patterns'. A vague pronoun reference means that more than one noun could be the antecedent, it is not clear which noun is the antecedent. Example: Jane and her friend June visited her relatives in Florida. Whose relatives, Jane's or June's?
None. The constitution has a rather vague reference to the "heads of the great departments", stating that the president has the power to get their written opinions on important issues but that is about it. Michael Montagne