The sentence, "A bicyclist uses their legs to power their bike." is not incorrect based on the fact that the bicyclist is a general word for any bicyclist, not identified as a male or a female. It is appropriate to use the plural, non-gender specific pronoun for a singular person in general.
You can edit the sentence to read:
"A bicyclist uses his legs to power his bike."
Or:
"A bicyclist uses her legs to power her bike."
The sentence, "A monkey can move from tree to tree by swinging with its legs and tail." also uses a correct pronoun antecedent agreement.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
The pronoun shows gender bias -Apex
Yes, it is important to have pronoun-antecedent agreement. This means that the pronoun (e.g. he, she, it) used must agree in number and gender with the noun it is replacing. Failing to maintain this agreement can lead to confusion or ambiguity in the sentence.
Type your answer here... The pronoun does not agree with its antecedent in number.
The noun that describes the noun-pronoun agreement is "agreement".
The pronoun does not agree with its antecedent in number.
The indefinite pronoun in the sentence is anyone.The indefinite pronoun has no antecedent in the sentence, it is a word for any person of those spoken to.Neither the group nor the individuals spoken to are specifically named.
The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' is considered singular and may take the third person singular verb 'requests'. The adjective pronoun 'their; may have a singular or a plural antecedent. It is singular when the gender of the antecedent is not specified, as in the case of an indefinite subject pronoun. 'Their' is in agreement with 'anyone'.
A pronoun is a substitute for a noun. An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun is standing in for.A pronoun must agree in number (singular, plural) and gender (male, female, neuter) with the noun antecedent.
You change it to When my mother shops for her, my sister is pleased
Yes, the relative pronoun 'who' is the correct pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'students' in both parts of the sentence."The students who take this deadline seriously are the students who are accepted."
The antecedent of the relative pronoun 'who' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the possessive adjective 'their' is the indefinite pronoun anyone.The antecedent of the personal pronoun 'it' is the noun copy.The indefinite pronoun 'anyone' has no antecedent. The pronoun 'anyone' is a word for any person of those spoken to.