Dave and Jenny are the antecedents for the plural pronouns their, they, they, and themselves.
Jace and Michael are the compound antecedent for the plural, personal pronoun they.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'me' is the noun (name) of the speaker, Sue.The word 'me' is the first person, singular, objective personal pronoun which is functioning as the indirect object of the verb 'will send'.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
When it is unclear what the antecedent of a pronoun is, it's calleda pronoun-antecedent error.
The pronoun their is correct because the antecedent (presenters) is plural.
A capitalized pronoun is one that is written with an uppercase letter. An antecedent capitalized pronoun is when a pronoun is capitalized because it refers to a specific person, place, or thing that has been previously mentioned in the text.
Sure, please provide the capitalized pronoun you would like the antecedent for.
The only capitalized pronoun is 'I', the pronoun for the name of the person speaking. The antecedent is the speaker's name. Since the speaker doesn't actually use their name to refer to them self, the antecedent is inferred.
Jace and Michael are the compound antecedent for the plural, personal pronoun they.
The antecedent for the pronoun "it" is "report." Sue demanded Steven to send her the report.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'me' is the noun (name) of the speaker, Sue.The word 'me' is the first person, singular, objective personal pronoun which is functioning as the indirect object of the verb 'will send'.
The antecedent for the pronoun "THEIR" is "Carol and Sandy," referring to both individuals as a plural noun.
The word themselves is not a noun; themselves is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun. Themselves is a reflexive and an intensive pronoun. A reflexive pronoun reflects back on its antecedent; an intensive pronoun is used to emphasize its antecedent. Examples: reflexive use: They did the work themselves. intensive use: They themselves did the work.
Yes, when the reflexive pronoun 'themselves' is used to emphasize the antecedent (children) it is called an intensive pronoun.
No, the antecedent is usually the noun(s) to which the pronoun refers.Example: Billy and Chrissy will not be attending the party because they are on vacation. They is the pronoun, and Billy and Chrissy is the antecedent.
No, the phrase has a correct pronoun-antecedent agreement. The antecedent "presenters" is plural, and the pronoun "their" is also plural, matching correctly.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'me' is the noun (name) of the speaker.In the example sentence, the speaker is not mentioned by name. The antecedent is implied.A first person pronoun does not use an antecedent. The speaker and the person spoken to know who is speaking. A reader will know the speaker from preceding text or the speaker may not be named in a text.