Pronouns have antecedents.
An antecedent is typically found in a sentence as a noun (or pronoun) that another pronoun refers back to. The antecedent provides context and clarity for the pronoun it precedes.
The antecedent of a pronoun is usually a noun or noun phrase. It is the word or words to which the pronoun refers in a sentence.
"Themself" is a pronoun that is considered non-standard English. It is used as a reflexive pronoun when referring to a singular antecedent that is not strictly gendered.
The word for the noun or noun phrase in a sentence is called the antecedent. This antecedent is later replaced by a pronoun to avoid repetition and make the writing or speech flow more smoothly.
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.
"He was tired." (Antecedent: John) "She is a doctor." (Antecedent: Sarah) "They are going to the store." (Antecedent: the children) "It is raining." (Antecedent: the weather)
The word antecedent is a noun.
The antecedent of a pronoun is usually a noun or noun phrase. It is the word or words to which the pronoun refers in a sentence.
A pronoun must agree with its antecedent noun, the noun that it is taking the place of. The pronoun must agree in number (singular or plural) and gender (male, female, neuter) with its antecedent.
A noun. Correct grammatical term for the word/s to which a pronoun refers is the antecedent.
In the sentence, "In your opinion the president was wrong about that." "that" is a pronoun. Its antecedent is presumably in a preceding sentence.
The antecedent of a third person pronoun is a noun for which the pronoun substitutes. This antecedent is the closest noun that agrees in number and gender with the pronoun and precedes the pronoun in the speech or writing that includes the pronoun. Preferably the antecedent is in the same sentence. A first or second person pronoun does not need any explicit antecedent: The antecedent of a first person pronoun is the speaker/writer or group of speakers/writers and the antecedent of a second person pronoun is the reader(s)/listener(s).
The word for the noun or noun phrase in a sentence is called the antecedent. This antecedent is later replaced by a pronoun to avoid repetition and make the writing or speech flow more smoothly.
"He was tired." (Antecedent: John) "She is a doctor." (Antecedent: Sarah) "They are going to the store." (Antecedent: the children) "It is raining." (Antecedent: the weather)
part of speech
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
what part of speech is beneath
adverb