A pronoun that has the same gender and number as its antecedent is called pronoun-antecedent agreement.
yes
"Our" in Spanish is nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras - depending on the gender and number of the objects that belong to you.
Agreement depends on the types of words you are using together. The most common grammatical agreement is to match any adjective that you use to the noun that it modifies in both number and gender. For example: "las chicas" is a noun frase that means 'the girls," the article "las" indicates that the noun "chicas" is both feminine and plural. In order to call these women 'tall' or "alto" we have to modify the word "alto" to be both feminine and plural. The resulting noun phrase is "las chicas altas."
Irma V. Alarcon has written: 'The second language acquisition of Spanish gender agreement' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Gender, Grammar, Comparative and general, Second language acquisition, Spanish language
Subjects and verbs agree in person and number (I am, the tree is, they are). Some adjectives (determiners) agree with nouns in number (this man, these men). In Spanish, adjectives also agree in gender with nouns (casa blanca, zapato blanco).
The word is the noun-pronoun antecedent agreement. The term used when the pronoun agrees in person, number, and gender with the antecedent noun.
An adjective in Spanish must agree in number (singular/plural) and gender with the noun that it describes.
electrico/a/(s), depending on gender and number of related noun
A word that substitutes for a noun is a pronoun, which must match the noun in person, number, gender. This is called pronoun-antecedent agreement.
Royalty agreement in Spanish is 'acuerdo de regalías.'
The adjective and noun agreement rule in Latin requires that a noun and any adjective that modifies must agree in gender, number, and case (but not necessarily ending).