The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

9
Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns

Transcript of The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

Page 1: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

The Grammar Outlaw

Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE

FORUnclear

Pronouns

Page 2: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

The Grammar Crime: Unclear pronoun reference makes

sentences confusing, vague, and difficult to understand. Example:

Both Isabel and Barbara loved her children.

Page 3: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

Are they Isabel’s children?

Are they Barbara’s children?

Page 4: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

To fix the sentence, we must identify the pronoun and the antecedent.

• A pronoun refers to a noun.

• An antecedent is the noun to which the pronoun refers.

• In our example, the pronoun is her. The antecedent is either Isabel or Barbara.

Page 5: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

From the sentence we cannot tell whose children they are. Because we cannot tell which of the nouns is the antecedent, this

sentence is an unclear pronoun reference outlaw.

Fixed: Both Isabel and Barbara loved

Isabel’s children.

Page 6: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

Question: How do we catch unclear pronoun reference outlaws?

Page 7: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

The clues: Find the pronoun and replace it

with the antecedent. If the pronoun reference is clear, the sentence should make sense.

Page 8: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

Outlaw: Mike and Trevor liked his dog.

The pronoun: his

The antecedent: Mike or Trevor?

The Fix:

Replace the pronoun with the antecedent:

Mike and Trevor liked Mike’s dog.

Page 9: The Grammar Outlaw Wanted DEAD OR ALIVE FOR Unclear Pronouns.

To catch the Grammar Outlaw:

Next time you’re revising, editing, or proofreading, check over your sentences to make sure your pronouns CLEARLY refer to their antecedents.