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  1. ACT English
  2. Pronouns

ACT ENGLISH • CONVENTIONS OF STANDARD ENGLISH

Pronouns

Master pronoun agreement, case, and clarity to eliminate common ACT English errors.

SECTION 1

Historical Context & Motivation

Pronouns are among the oldest and most fundamental words in any language, serving as stand-ins for nouns so that speakers and writers can avoid clumsy repetition. English inherited its pronoun system from Old English, a language spoken over a thousand years ago, which itself descended from Proto-Germanic and, further back, Proto-Indo-European. Over the centuries, English pronouns have shifted in form, lost certain case endings, and absorbed new conventions, but their core purpose has remained the same: to make communication clearer and more efficient.

~450 CE
Old English Pronoun System
Old English featured a complex pronoun system with four grammatical cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative) and even a dual number for referring to exactly two people.
~1100
Middle English Simplification
Following the Norman Conquest, English lost many inflectional endings. The dual number disappeared, and pronouns began consolidating into fewer distinct forms.
~1500
Early Modern English Shifts
Shakespeare's English saw 'thou' and 'thee' give way to the universal 'you.' Pronoun case distinctions (who vs. whom, I vs. me) became standardized in grammar books.
1959
The ACT is Established
The ACT test begins assessing students' command of Standard Written English, including pronoun usage, agreement, and case — skills that remain central to the exam today.
Present
Modern Pronoun Questions on the ACT
Today's ACT English section consistently tests pronoun-antecedent agreement, pronoun case, and ambiguous reference. These questions appear on virtually every test form.

Understanding pronouns matters for the ACT because pronoun errors are among the most frequently tested grammar issues on the English section. The test asks you to identify when a pronoun doesn't match its antecedent in number or gender, when the wrong case is used, or when the reference is ambiguous. Mastering these rules can help you pick up several points on test day — and the good news is that the rules are logical and consistent.

SECTION 2

Core Principles & Definitions

Before diving into specific rules, you need to understand a few key terms. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun or another pronoun. The word that the pronoun replaces or refers back to is called its antecedent. For example, in the sentence "Maria grabbed her backpack," the pronoun "her" refers to the antecedent "Maria." The ACT tests your ability to ensure that each pronoun has a clear antecedent and that the two agree in number, person, and gender.

1

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

A pronoun must match its antecedent in number (singular or plural) and gender. "Each student must bring his or her book" — not "their book" when strict agreement is tested.
2

Pronoun Case

Pronouns change form depending on their function: subject (I, he, she, they), object (me, him, her, them), or possessive (my, his, her, their). The ACT tests whether you choose the right case.
3

Ambiguous Reference

A pronoun should refer to one specific antecedent. "When Alex met Jordan, he smiled" is ambiguous — who smiled? The ACT expects you to fix unclear references.
4

Relative Pronouns

Who/whom refer to people; which refers to things; that can refer to people or things. The ACT tests whether you select the correct relative pronoun for the context.
5

Pronoun Consistency

Once you establish a point of view (first, second, or third person), remain consistent. Don't shift from "one" to "you" or from "a person" to "they" without reason.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 3

Visual Explanation — Pronoun-Antecedent Map

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement MapThe students finished their project before Ms. Chen returned to her desk.ANTECEDENT"The students" (plural)PRONOUN"their" (plural) ✓ANTECEDENT"Ms. Chen" (sing. fem.)PRONOUN"her" (sing. fem.) ✓The students finished his project before Ms. Chen returned to their desk.✗ INCORRECT — "his" doesn't agree with "students" (plural); "their" doesn't agree with "Ms. Chen" (singular)Each pronoun must match its antecedent in number and gender.
The top sentence shows correct pronoun-antecedent agreement: the plural pronoun "their" links back to the plural antecedent "The students," and the singular feminine pronoun "her" links to "Ms. Chen." The bottom sentence illustrates two common errors the ACT tests.

In the diagram above, the dashed arrows trace each pronoun back to its antecedent. On the ACT, you should mentally draw these same arrows every time you see an underlined pronoun. Ask yourself: What noun does this pronoun replace? Does it match in number (singular or plural) and gender? If you can't draw a clear, unambiguous arrow to a single antecedent, the sentence likely contains an error.

SECTION 4

How Pronoun Rules Work on the ACT

Rule 1: Pronoun-Antecedent Number Agreement

The most commonly tested pronoun rule on the ACT is number agreement. A singular antecedent takes a singular pronoun, and a plural antecedent takes a plural pronoun. Watch out for tricky singular antecedents like "each," "every," "everyone," "anybody," and "neither" — these words feel plural but are grammatically singular. For instance, "Everyone must submit his or her application" is correct for strict agreement, while "Everyone must submit their application" would be flagged on the ACT as an agreement error.

Rule 2: Pronoun Case

Pronoun case refers to the form a pronoun takes depending on its role in a sentence. Subjective case pronouns (I, he, she, we, they, who) serve as subjects or subject complements. Objective case pronouns (me, him, her, us, them, whom) serve as objects of verbs or prepositions. A simple trick: remove the other person from the sentence. "Me and Jake went to the store" becomes "Me went to the store," which sounds wrong — so the correct version is "Jake and I went to the store."

Rule 3: Who vs. Whom

The distinction between who and whom is a frequent ACT target. "Who" is the subject form (like "he" or "she"), and "whom" is the object form (like "him" or "her"). Try substituting: if "he" fits, use "who"; if "him" fits, use "whom." For example, "The student who received the award" (he received the award) versus "The teacher whom we admire" (we admire him).

Rule 4: Ambiguous or Vague Reference

An ambiguous reference occurs when a pronoun could refer to more than one antecedent. "When the manager spoke with the employee, she was upset" — who was upset? The ACT will offer answer choices that replace the pronoun with a specific noun to eliminate confusion. Also watch for vague uses of "this," "that," "it," or "which" that don't point to a clear noun.

Pronoun Forms by Case
Pronoun TypeSubject FormObject FormPossessive Form
First person singularImemy / mine
First person pluralweusour / ours
Second personyouyouyour / yours
Third person singularhe / she / ithim / her / ithis / her / its
Third person pluraltheythemtheir / theirs
Relative (people)whowhomwhose
Relative (things)which / thatwhich / thatwhose
SECTION 5

Tricky Antecedents & Common Traps

The ACT loves to test pronouns in situations where the correct antecedent is not immediately obvious. Several categories of tricky antecedents appear again and again. Learning to spot these patterns will help you move quickly and confidently through pronoun questions on test day.

ACT Pronoun Traps — Decision FlowchartSee an underlined pronoun?Step 1: Find the antecedentCan't find one? Or twopossible antecedents?Found one clearantecedent?→ Ambiguous reference errorStep 2: Check numberMismatch → Agreement errorStep 3: CaseWrong case → Case errorAll checks pass ✓ No error
This flowchart shows the three-step process you should follow whenever you encounter an underlined pronoun on the ACT: first locate the antecedent (checking for ambiguity), then verify number agreement, then confirm the correct case. If the pronoun passes all three checks, it is correct.

Indefinite Pronouns — The Biggest Trap

The ACT frequently pairs indefinite pronouns — words like "everyone," "each," "nobody," and "either" — with plural pronouns to create agreement errors. Even though "everyone" feels like it refers to multiple people, it is grammatically singular. The correct pairing is "Everyone should bring his or her notebook," not "Everyone should bring their notebook" — at least by the standards the ACT currently uses.

  • Always singular: each, every, everyone, everybody, everything, anyone, anybody, anything, someone, somebody, something, no one, nobody, nothing, either, neither
  • Always plural: both, few, many, several
  • Singular or plural (depends on the object of "of"): all, any, more, most, none, some
ACT TIP
SECTION 6

Worked Example — ACT-Style Passage

Let's walk through an ACT-style question step by step. Read the following sentence carefully:

SAMPLE QUESTION

Step 1 — Identify the Pronoun's Role

The pronoun is the subject of the clause "___ had won the championship." Since it performs the action of winning, we need a subject-case pronoun. This eliminates "them" and "him," which are object-case.
Eliminated: "them" and "him"

Step 2 — Find the Antecedent

The pronoun refers back to the subject of the main clause: "Neither the coach nor the players." In a "neither...nor" construction, the verb — and the pronoun — agree with the noun closest to it. The closest noun is "the players," which is plural.
Antecedent = "the players" → plural

Step 3 — Match Number and Case

We need a subject-case, plural pronoun. "He or she" is singular — it doesn't match "players." "They" is plural and subject-case, which is exactly what we need.
Answer: "they"

Step 4 — Verify by Reading Aloud

"Neither the coach nor the players could believe that they had won the championship." This sounds natural, the pronoun is in the correct case, and it agrees in number with the nearest antecedent. The answer is confirmed.
SECTION 7

Common Errors & How to Avoid Them

Knowing the rules is half the battle; the other half is recognizing how the ACT presents pronoun errors in context. The test writers are skilled at disguising errors by placing distracting phrases between the pronoun and its antecedent or by using constructions that sound acceptable in everyday speech but violate Standard Written English.

Common Pronoun Errors Tested on the ACT
Error TypeIncorrect ExampleCorrected Version
Singular/Plural MismatchEach of the musicians tuned their instrument.Each of the musicians tuned his or her instrument.
Wrong Case (Subject)Her and I went to the library.She and I went to the library.
Wrong Case (Object)The teacher gave the award to Marcus and I.The teacher gave the award to Marcus and me.
Ambiguous ReferenceWhen Sara met Mia, she was nervous.When Sara met Mia, Sara was nervous.
Who vs. WhomThe author whom inspired the film is famous.The author who inspired the film is famous.
Its vs. It'sThe committee released it's final report.The committee released its final report.
Shift in PersonWhen one studies hard, you can expect good results.When one studies hard, one can expect good results.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 8

Connection to College-Level Writing

Pronoun mastery doesn't just help you on the ACT — it's a foundational skill for college-level writing. In academic essays, ambiguous pronoun references can undermine your argument's clarity, and case errors can make your prose seem careless to professors. The principles you learn here scale directly into more advanced writing contexts.

From ACT Skills to College Writing
ACT Pronoun SkillCollege Writing Application
Pronoun-antecedent agreementMaintaining clarity in thesis statements and complex arguments with multiple subjects
Pronoun case (who/whom)Writing formal research papers with sophisticated relative clauses
Avoiding ambiguous referenceEnsuring precision in lab reports, literary analysis, and historical arguments
Pronoun consistency (person shifts)Maintaining a consistent academic voice throughout long essays and dissertations
Its vs. it's / their vs. they'reDemonstrating attention to detail that professors expect in polished submissions

It's also worth noting that language conventions evolve. In recent years, the singular "they" has gained wide acceptance in professional and academic writing as a gender-neutral pronoun. However, the ACT currently tests pronoun-antecedent agreement according to traditional Standard Written English rules, which means the test expects singular antecedents to pair with singular pronouns. Stay aware of both the testing standard and real-world usage — you'll need the former for the ACT and the latter for everything after.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Everybody on the team celebrated their victory. In the sentence above, the word 'their' is underlined. Which of the following is the best replacement for the underlined word?
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
Read the following sentence and answer the question below."The principal gave the certificates to Maria and _____."Which of the following correctly completes the sentence?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read the following sentence and answer the question below."The scientist [UNDERLINE]who the committee nominated[/UNDERLINE] for the award presented her findings to the board, leaving the members deeply impressed."Which of the following is the best replacement for the underlined portion?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Each of the volunteers who signed up for the beach cleanup was asked to bringtheirown trash bags.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Read the following sentence and answer the question below. "Neither the students nor the teacher could find the textbook that [BLANK] had ordered, and she blamed the bookstore for the mix-up." Which of the following is the best replacement for [BLANK]?
SUMMARY

Summary — Pronouns on the ACT

Varsity Tutors • ACT English • Pronouns — Pronouns