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The team members wanted to improve their skills.
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
The pronoun should agree in number with its antecedent.
"The cats played with their toys." "The dogs wagged their tails happily." In both sentences, the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedent ("cats" and "dogs" respectively), making them grammatically correct.
Certainly! Please provide the sentence with the italicized pronoun and antecedent so I can assist you further.
The team members wanted to improve their skills.
To determine the correct sentence, ensure the italicized pronoun matches the number (singular or plural) of its antecedent. For example, in the sentence "The team celebrated its victory," the singular pronoun "its" agrees with the singular antecedent "team." In contrast, a sentence like "The players celebrated their victory" uses the plural pronoun "their" to agree with the plural antecedent "players."
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
The pronoun should agree in number with its antecedent.
Please provide the sentences you're referring to, and I'll help you identify the one where the italicized pronoun agrees in number with its italicized noun.
"The cats played with their toys." "The dogs wagged their tails happily." In both sentences, the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedent ("cats" and "dogs" respectively), making them grammatically correct.
The correct meaning of the italicized words "al norte" in the sentence is "to the north."
Antecedent
"The students gathered in the library to study for their exams."
The antecedent of 'he' in the sentence is 'Cory', as it refers back to the subject of the sentence.