what do you consider the most important rule governing the uses of pronouns in any kind of text?
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sorry I don't know
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please ask Google I am really sorry
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Regarding language, the most important thing to note is that the purpose is to convey ideas. If you can't understand the person who is listening to you or reading what you have written, your language is not effective. The most popular reason people confuse you with pronouns is because they do not understand what the pronoun refers to. You just have to read through what you wrote and wonder if someone else is going to understand it.
Explanation:
- Pronouns have t3cases: nominative (I/you/he/she/it/they), possessive (my, your/his/her/their), and objective (me/him/her/him/us/them). We must use the nominative case when the pronoun is the subject of our sentence,
- It is easier to maintain a consistent distinction between pronouns and their identities if you note that pronouns are present in three cases:
- Subjective case – the doer (subject) of the action: I throw the ball.
- Objective case – the receiver (object) of the action: Throw the ball to me.
- Possessive case – shows ownership: My hit struck the player out!
- For most cases, if your sentence has a specific subject, you can use a singular pronoun. Yet you do not often know the preferred gender of the subject or the subject is not male or female. If this is not possible or results in ambiguous or vague writing, you may rework the sentence in order to avoid the need to use it, it or it as a singular, gender-neutral pronoun. In these situations, it is possible. For example, Parents want their children to succeed in school.
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