There are no pronouns in the example sentence.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
There are three nouns in the example sentence.
The same sentence using pronouns in place of the nouns:
He went to the store and paid for the groceries.
Gordon went to it and paid for the groceries.
Gordon went to the store and paid for them.
If wanted to and had the store's permission he could but he wouldn't be paid or have his position acknowledged as a job.
Jeff Gordon
The past tense of "paid" is also "paid," and the past participle is also "paid." For example, "I paid for the groceries yesterday" (past tense) and "The bill has been paid" (past participle).
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.
Adrian smith and Gordon Gill Architecture
A boxer uses the fists to fight other individuals for money. Another meaning of the boxer is a person in a grocery store that packs groceries for customers after they are paid for. Boxers in grocery stores might also stock shelves and help customers take purchases to their vehicles.
For the 2006 season, Gordon received a base salary of two hundred seventy five thousand dollars and five thousand in bonuses.
You won't be able to be hired until you're 16, sorry! (I work at Food Lion)
it depends...
4 $2s, 1 $5, 1 $50, 2 $20s
A disagreement in person is when a first person pronoun takes the place of a noun in the second or third person; when a second person pronoun takes the place of a noun in the first or third person; or when a third person pronoun takes the place of a noun or pronoun in the first or second person.Example: The Mary bought a new car. You paid a lot of money for it.The pronoun 'you' is a second person pronoun, the person spoken to, taking the place of the noun 'Mary', a third person noun, the person spoken about.A disagreement in number is when a singular pronoun takes the place of a plural noun (or two or more nouns); or a plural pronoun takes the place of a singular noun.Example: Jack and Jill bought a new car. He paid a lot of money for it.The singular pronoun 'he' is taking the pace of two nouns. A plural pronoun (they, them) should take the place of two or more nouns.A disagreement in gender is when a pronoun for a male takes the place of a noun for a female or a thing; when a pronoun for a female takes the place of a noun for a male or a thing; or when a pronoun for a thing takes the place of a noun for a male or a female.Example: Mary bought a new car. She paid a lot of money for him.The pronoun for a male (him) is taking the place of a noun for a thing (car). The neuter pronoun 'it' should take the place of a neuter noun.
usually with a check.