A pronoun is a word that stands for a
noun. Effective use of pronouns gives flexibility in your writing.
e.g.
The manager left for New York . He took
a train.
e.g. I
bought a winter coat. It cost me one hundred dollars.
Relative pronouns (who, whom, which, that)
introduce clauses that describe nouns or pronouns. These relative clauses can
be restrictive (that is, containing essential information),
or non-restrictive (that is, containing only additional but
non-essential information).
Compare
the following pairs of sentences:
e.g.
The man who shot the policeman was an illegal immigrant.
(correct)
The
relative clause above identifies the man, and therefore
is essential to meaning of the sentence.
e.g.
The man, who shot the policeman, was an illegal immigrant. (incorrect)
The non-restrictive relative
clause above provides only additional information. The use of
a non-restrictive clause with the two commas further implies
that it can be deleted; however, without who shot the policeman,
the sentence would not make much sense. unless you would emphasize the fact
that he was an illegal immigrant.
e.g.
The reporter who took the photos is now being sued for
invasion of privacy. (correct)
The
relative clause above is restrictive because it identifies the
reporter being sued.
e.g.
The reporter, who took the photos, is now being sued for invasion
of privacy. (correct)
The
relative clause above becomes non-restrictive with the
addition of two commas, and “who took the photos” becomes extra information
non-essential to the meaning of the sentence. The sentence without the
non-restrictive clause “who took the photos” would still make sense, and therefore is correct as it
stands.
Knowing
the difference between a restrictive and non-restrictive relative clause will
help you in effective sentence construction.
Incorrect
use of subjective pronouns is a common grammatical error.
e.g. My father and I went
to see the show. (NOT me: both of us went to see
the show)
Compare
to this one” My father took me to
the show.”
e.g. It
is I who made the decision. (NOT me: I made
the decision.)
e.g.
The real winners are we ourselves. (NOT us: we are
the real winners.)
e.g.
The man who called us was who? (NOT whom: who called
us?)
e.g.
The woman who lost her purse was she. (NOT her: she lost
her purse.)
e.g.
John and he went to the movie. (NOT him: both went
to the movie.)
The
correct use of pronouns can be difficult with certain expressions, such
as, as and more than. The following pairs of
sentences are correct, but the meaning is different.
e.g.
She likes him more than I.
(She likes him more than I like him.)
e.g. She
likes him more than me. (She likes him more than she
likes me.)
e.g. I
like Peter better than she. (I
like Peter better than she likes Peter.)
e.g. I
like Peter better than her. (I like Peter better than I
like her.)
Use possessive pronouns with gerunds (words
ending in ing) correctly.
e.g.
You don’t like my going to the movie by myself. (NOT me
going: you don’t like the “going” not “me” the person.)
e.g. Your smirking
irritates me. (NOT you smirking: not “you” but your “smirking”
irritates me)
A
pronoun must agree with its antecedent (the noun that a
pronoun refers to).
e.g.
All is well. (referring to the sum of all
things)
e.g.
All are well. (referring to a number of people)
e.g.
Everyone wants to get his or her application
submitted. (NOT their)
e.g.
None of them is going to succeed. (NOT are: the
subject is none)
e.g.
Some is better than none. (referring to a quantity)
e.g.
Some are good. (referring to a number of things)
Stephen
Lau
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