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Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

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Page 1: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work© 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

References

Page 2: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

ObjectivesDetermine pronoun/antecedent agreement with reference to person, number, and gender.Determine the correct use of singular or plural pronouns with compound subject antecedents.Use the correct pronoun references with collective noun antecedents.

PP 8-1a

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Page 3: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Objectives

PP 8-1b

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Use appropriate singular and plural pronoun references with indefinite pronoun antecedents. Correct unclear or dual pronoun references.Identify explanatory phrases in determining antecedents.Use correct pronoun forms with than and as.Differentiate between one- and two-word indefinite pronouns.

Page 4: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

An antecedent is the word or group of words to which a personal pronoun refers or that a personal pronoun replaces.A pronoun must give accurate and unmistakable reference to the noun or other pronoun it replaces.The pronoun must agree with its antecedent in number (singular, plural), gender (masculine, feminine, neuter), and person (first, second, third).

Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement

PP 8-2

Page 5: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Joyce Hing earns her living by giving cultural awareness workshops.

Noun as Antecedent

PP 8-3

The antecedent is Joyce Hing, a third-person singular noun. The third-person singular pronoun her is necessary when referring to this antecedent.

Page 6: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

We need an agenda to know what is expected of us at the workshop.

Pronoun as Antecedent

PP 8-4

The antecedent is we, a first-person plural pronoun. The first-person plural pronoun us is necessary when referring to this antecedent.

Page 7: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Steps for Determining Antecedent Agreement

PP 8-5a

1. Identify the pronoun.2. Decide to whom or to what this pronoun refers or

what it replaces--the antecedent.3. Identify the person (first, second, third); gender

(masculine, feminine, neuter); and number (singular, plural) of the antecedent.

4. Identify the person, gender, and number of the referenced pronoun.

Page 8: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Steps for Determining Antecedent Agreement

PP 8-5b

5. Determine if the person, gender, and number are the same for the pronoun and the antecedent. If they are, you have agreement. If they are not the same, you have a correction to make.

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Page 9: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

First Person and Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-6

Use a first-person pronoun if you have an antecedent that refers to the person or persons speaking.

I reviewed my French before going on a sales trip to Quebec.She perceives situations from her cultural background.

Page 10: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Second Person and Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-7

Use the second-person pronoun if you have an antecedent that refers to the person or persons spoken to.

You should change your voice mail to include instructions in Spanish.

Page 11: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Third Person and Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-8

Use a third-person pronoun if you have an antecedent that refers to the person or thing spoken about.

Welfare reform is controversial, but it is decreasing the number of people receiving welfare benefits.

Page 12: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Feminine Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-9

Use a feminine pronoun (she, her, hers) when the pronoun definitely refers to a feminine antecedent.

Laura was working as part of a team and sharing her workload with others.Catherine provides timely feedback to her employees.

Page 13: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Masculine Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-10

Use a masculine pronoun (he, his, him) when the pronoun definitely refers to a masculine antecedent.

John treats all his coworkers with respect.When did he say that he was relocating his business to London?

Page 14: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Neuter Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-11

Use a neuter gender pronoun (it, its) to refer to an antecedent that represents things rather than persons.

Diversity training is a positive experience if it is well planned.

Page 15: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Unknown Gender Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-12

Use both masculine and feminine pronouns when you do not know the gender of the antecedent or when you want to refer to a common gender antecedent such as employee, instructor, or student.

The e-mail that we received from an employee named Chris explained the problem that he or she wanted us to solve.

Page 16: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Singular & Plural Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-13

Use a singular pronoun (he, she, him, her, his, it) if you use a singular antecedent. Ginny discussed her harassment complaint with her supervisor.

Use a plural pronoun (they, their, them) if you use a plural antecedent. Employees are not always aware that their actions may offend customers.

Page 17: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Compound Subject and Pronoun Agreement

PP 8-14

A compound subject consists of two or more persons, places, things, activities, ideas, or qualities.When the antecedent is a compound subject, the connecting word (and, or, nor) determines whether the pronoun is singular or plural.

Page 18: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Antecedents Joined by And

PP 8-15

Use a plural pronoun to refer to two or more antecedents (compound subject) joined by the word and.

New York and New Jersey allow their state employees ten holidays a year. Matthew and Marjorie traveled to Spain as part of their degree programs.

Page 19: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Antecedents Joined by Or or Nor

PP 8-16a

Use a singular pronoun to refer to two singular antecedents joined by or or nor. David or Ken will translate the document into Chinese at his computer.

Use a plural pronoun to refer to two plural antecedents joined by or or nor. Unfair hiring practices or prejudices take their toll on workplace diversity.

Page 20: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Antecedents Joined by Or or Nor

PP 8-16b

Use a pronoun that agrees in number with the closest antecedent when a singular antecedent and a plural antecedent are joined by or or nor.

Neither Teresa nor her assistants were aware of their negative attitudes.The supervisor or the team managers had to justify their reasons for requesting bilingual employees.

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Page 21: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Collective Antecedents

PP 8-17a

A collective antecedent refers to a group of people such as a committee, class, board, or jury.A collective antecedent is neuter in gender.

Page 22: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Collective Antecedents With Groups

PP 8-17b

Use a singular pronoun reference when the collective antecedent is acting as a group. The Gender Equity Committee will announce its new slate of officers next week.

Use a plural pronoun reference when the members within the group are acting individually. The committee were not unanimous in their vote to hire a diversity coordinator.

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Page 23: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Collective Antecedents With Companies & Organizations

PP 8-17c

Use a singular pronoun reference with antecedents that are companies and organizationsHahn Electronics offers unpaid leaves to its workers.Pellini Chevrolet allows its employees to choose among several different benefit packages.

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Page 24: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Indefinite Pronoun Antecedents

PP 8-18a

Some indefinite pronouns are always singular; others are always plural.Several are either singular or plural depending on their context in the sentences. Indefinite pronouns are third-person pronouns. When indefinite pronouns are used as antecedents, appropriate third-person pronouns must be used in reference to them.

Page 25: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Indefinite Pronoun Antecedents

PP 8-18b

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Indefinite Pronouns

Always Singular

another

anybody

anyone

anything

each

each one

either

enough

every

everybody

everyone

everything

many a

much

neither

no one

nobody

nothing

one

other

somebody

someone

something

 

Page 26: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Indefinite Pronoun Antecedents

PP 8-18c

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Indefinite Pronouns

Always Plural

both others

few several

many

Singular or Plural

all more none

any most some

Page 27: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Singular Indefinite Pronoun

PP 8-19

Use a singular personal pronoun reference when the antecedent is a singular indefinite pronoun. Everybody at our workplace can donate his or her sick leave to other employees.

Ignore an intervening prepositional phrase when locating the antecedent. Either of the two men can approve overtime for his supervisor.

Page 28: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Plural Indefinite Pronouns

PP 8-20

Use a plural personal pronoun reference when the antecedent is a plural indefinite pronoun.Ignore intervening prepositional phrases when locating the antecedent. Both of the new employees from Mexico updated their computer skills at a community college. Only a few of the employees listed their home phone numbers in the company directory.

Page 29: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Use of They, You, It

PP 8-21

Avoid the use of they, you, and it unless you are very specific in identifying the antecedent.

We never discuss age because they become very opinionated. (Substitute my coworkers or my friends for they).Recent immigrants apply for positions where you do not need to speak English. (Substitute they, workers, or employees for you.)

Page 30: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Explanatory Phrases

PP 8-22

Do not consider such explanatory phrases as in addition to, as well as, or together with when identifying an antecedent.

Managers, as well as support staff, brought their concerns to the meeting.Managers, in addition to a consultant, developed cultural awareness workshops for their staff.

Page 31: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Unclear Reference

PP 8-23

Reword a sentence if a pronoun seems to refer to more than one antecedent.

Managers who observe absentee problems in their employees should report them to Marie. (Are the managers reporting the problems or are they reporting the employees?)Managers who observe absentee problems in their employees should report these employees to Marie.

Page 32: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Pronouns After Than and As

PP 8-24

In incomplete adverb clauses using than and as, choose the case of the pronoun that you would use if the missing words were present.

I do not have the same understanding of English as you.The customers in the California office are much more casual than we.

Page 33: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Everyone, Every One, No One

PP 8-25

Write the words everyone and anyone as two words when they precede an of phrase.Write them as one word at all other times. No one is always two words.

Everyone is involved in the international career workshop.Every one of the participants enjoyed the international career workshop.

Page 34: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work

Pronoun/Antecedent Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement Agreement

Each Other / One Another

PP 8-26

Use each other when you refer to two persons or things. Sarah and John decided to eliminate sports analogies when communicating with each other.

Use one another when you refer to more than two persons or things. Before a meeting, team members find informal conversation establishes relationships with one another.

Page 35: Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill References

Business English at Work© 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

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