Driver is singular, and there is no gender given. A person cannot say "they" because they is plural. Saying "he or she" shows that it is singular, and though there is no gender given, the person is not neutral (if the antecedent is neutral, a person would say "it").
The pronouns both agree with their antecedents.
Type your answer here... The pronoun does not agree with its antecedent in number.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
The pronoun their is correct because the antecedent (presenters) is plural.
Pronoun is they; antecedent noun is students. They do agree.
No, the phrase has a correct pronoun-antecedent agreement. The antecedent "presenters" is plural, and the pronoun "their" is also plural, matching correctly.
There is no antecedent for the only pronoun in the sentence. The pronoun 'they' is usually a personal pronoun that takes the place of a plural noun or nouns or the names of two or more people or things. In the case of this sentence, the antecedent for 'they' may have been in a preceding sentence. A correct antecedent may have been the actors, the teachers, or possibly the deaf. Another correct antecedent may have been the names of characters in a play or a story.
The pronoun their is correct because the antecedent (presenters) is plural.
"Most presenters spoke without looking at their notes" is correct because "presenters" is a plural noun, so the pronoun "their" is used to show agreement. Using "his or her notes" would imply singular presenters, which is not the case.
The indefinite pronoun each is the antecedent for the pronouns his or her.If the sentence read, 'Each applicant must submit...', then each is used as an adjective to describe the noun 'applicant', which would then be the antecedent for 'his or her'.Both versions of the sentence and the antecedents would be correct.
his
Yes, it is important to have pronoun-antecedent agreement. This means that the pronoun (e.g. he, she, it) used must agree in number and gender with the noun it is replacing. Failing to maintain this agreement can lead to confusion or ambiguity in the sentence.
No, the correct sentence is:"When a driver wants to buy a new vehicle he or she usually test drives it."The singular personal pronoun "it" takes the place of the singular antecedent noun "vehicle".