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The Super-Mega-Pronoun-Agreement Lesson of Awesomeness This space intentionally left blank.

Dec 16, 2015

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The Super-Mega-Pronoun-Agreement Lesson of Awesomeness

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Nobody knows that eating chocolate-broccoli muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamin C.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

Can you spot the pronouns?

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

Here is a hint.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals. Ok, that was more than a hint. Both of these are pronouns: (nobody=indefinite, their=possessive).

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

Now. We must decide whether the pronouns agree.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

What do you think?

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

If you said “no,” then you are absolutely correct.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

Nobody means “not one person” and is a singular pronoun.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

Their is a possessive pronoun associated with a plural antecedent.

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Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide their bodies with vitamins and minerals.

The correct way (even though it sounds weird): Nobody knows that eating dirt muffins is a good way to provide his or her body with vitamins and minerals.

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Let’s try another.

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The catering committee received compliments for their squid-eye stew.

Any pronouns?

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The catering committee received compliments for their squid-eye stew.

You’re right. The possessive pronoun “their” makes another appearance.

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The catering committee received compliments for their squid-eye stew.

But, does it work here?

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The catering committee received compliments for their squid-eye stew.

Right again! The possessive pronoun “their” is only for a plural antecedent. The catering committee is a singular noun.

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The catering committee received compliments for their squid-eye stew.

The sentence should read: The catering committee received compliments for its squid-eye stew.

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One last example.

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The cricket and the frog outside the boy’s window chirped so loud they kept him awake all night.

Let’s cut to the chase. The pronoun here is “they.”

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The cricket and the frog outside the boy’s window chirped so loud they kept him awake all night.

Does it work? What is the antecedent?

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The cricket and the frog outside the boy’s window chirped so loud they kept him awake all night.

Yup. It’s “the cricket and the frog,” which, together make a compound subject (by default plural). So, “they” is correct.

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The end