PRONOUN REFERENCE What is pronoun reference? Pronoun reference is the practice of making pronouns refer clearly to the words they replace. A pronoun takes the place of a noun; thus, the pronoun must agree with the noun it replaces in number and person. Also, it must be clear which noun the pronoun is substituting for. The noun that the pronoun is the substitute for is called the antecedent. What are the basic rules for pronoun reference? 1. A pronoun must agree in number with the noun it refers to. If the noun is singular, then the pronoun must be singular. Incorrect: Everyone is studying hard for their exams. Correct: Everyone is studying hard for his or her exams. Correct: All of the students are studying hard for their exams. 2. A pronoun must agree in person with the noun it refers to. Be consistent with first person, second person and third person. Incorrect: If a student studies hard, you should succeed. Correct: If a student studies hard, he or she should succeed. 3. There should be only one possible antecedent for a singular pronoun. Only the noun that the pronoun refers to should come before the pronoun. Incorrect: Nguyen and Mohammed walked to his English class. Correct: Nguyen and Mohammed walked to Nguyen’s English class. Correct: Nguyen walked to his English class and Mohammed accompanied him. 4. There must be an explicit antecedent. Don’t make the reader guess what the antecedent is. Incorrect: In the study, they state that writing skills are important. Correct: In the study, the researchers state that writing skills are important. 5. A pronoun should not refer to a possessive noun. When a noun is possessive, it functions as an adjective and so can’t be replaced with a pronoun. Incorrect: In the professor’s comments, she was very encouraging. Correct: The professor’s comments were very encouraging. Correct: The professor was very encouraging in her comments. 6. “It” must be used consistently. If you use “it” to refer to one noun in a sentence, don’t use it again to refer to another noun in the same sentence or as an idiom. Incorrect: When it is busy, I hope to get a lot of sleep as it will help me work hard. Correct: When it is busy, I hope to get a lot of sleep, which will help me work hard. “Which,” “That” & “This” Because these pronouns can refer to entire sentences and paragraphs, as well as single nouns, they must be used precisely. Incorrect: Problem: Correct: My professor accused me of plagiarism. This was unethical. Which was unethical: the accusation or the author’s plagiarism? My professor’s accusation of plagiarism was unethical. “Who,” “Which” & “That” The pronoun “who” is used to refer to people and animals that have names. The pronoun “which” is used to refer to things and animals that don’t have names. The pronoun “that” is used to refer to things, animals that don’t have names, and, rarely, collective or anonymous people. Avoid mixing up these pronouns. Incorrect: Correct: A student that studies hard will succeed. A student who studies hard will succeed. © Jennifer Duncan. The Writing Centre, University of Toronto at Scarborough. See terms and conditions for use at http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/~tlsweb/TWC/webresources/terms.htm Name Date PRONOUN REFERENCE – EXERCISE 1 Directions: In the sentences below, fix any pronoun reference errors that you find. 1. Fred told Tony that polka-dotted underwear was showing through the ripped seat of his dress pants. 2. Brendan's snoring was so loud that he distracted everyone in class from the exciting pronoun reference lecture. 3. Ms. Simmons decided to postpone the pronoun reference quiz so that her composition students could discuss their new 3,000-word essay.