They loved each other and sexed
The antecedent for "they" would be the noun or pronoun that "they" refers to in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The students performed well in their exams," the antecedent for "they" is "students."
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
Example of a noun antecedent of a pronoun:The students did well with the exercise. Theyare eager to learn which makes it much easier to teach them. (the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the plural noun 'students' as the subject of the sentence; the pronoun 'them' takes the place of the noun 'students' as the object of the verb 'teach')Example of a noun phrase antecedent of a pronoun:A group of students did the exercises. They did very well. I look forward to working with them again.Example of a pronoun antecedent of a pronoun:Everyone tried the exercises. They did very well. I look forward to working with them again. (the antecedent is the indefinite pronoun 'everyone')
The antecedent (referring word, referent) for a pronoun is a noun a noun phrase, or a pronoun.The boy saw a dog coming toward him. - him refers to the noun boyAs for brushing your teeth, it can prevent bad breath as well. - it refers to "brushing your teeth"You and I can finish this ourselves. - the pronoun ourselves refers to the pronouns "you and I"
In logic, an antecedent is a statement that comes before another statement, known as the consequent. The antecedent is a condition or premise that, if true, leads to the consequent being true as well. In other words, the antecedent is the "if" part of an "if-then" statement, while the consequent is the "then" part.
well this is were you nead a book
A good website for finding commercial picnic tables is www.picnictables.com. They have many selections of different types of commercial picnic tables at low prices.
"Finding an ant in the potato salad was an inauspicious beginning to the picnic." As in, considering how this picnic's beginning, it doesn't seem like it's going to go very well.
Yes. But it might be an understood antecedent and not always stated. For example, your door bell rings and you find 2 children standing outside. They say, "We're selling candy for our school." They didn't identify themselves so technically the antecedent wasn't provided. But it can be understood (duh) that "we" refers to the 2 kids. If you use a pronoun and the audience doesn't know who you are referring to, you aren't communicating well. They don't know who or what you are talking about.
well there are many things to do on a sunny day i will give you one play with your mates.
We cannot see the sentences; therefore we cannot help you rewrite them unless you include them in your question. And if there is more than one sentence, you would need to ask more than one question, one for each sentence.
Well if it is the title then yes but if it is in general then no.