A grammatical antecedent is an intrinsic part of grammar. Using one incorrectly can cause confusion in your reader. Here’s how to avoid that.
Table of contents
โThe mayorโs spokesperson has filed a complaint demanding that he be prosecuted for perjury.โ
I had to read it again. This person filed a complaint against himself? Oh, I said to myself when I figured it out. Itโs the mayor he wants prosecuted.
Another Case of a Confusing or Missing Antecedent
Pronouns like โhe,โ โsheโ and โitโ substitute for a noun used earlier, called the antecedent. The pronoun refers back to the antecedent noun. The general rule is that the pronounโs antecedent is the noun closest to the pronoun. You can therefore understand my momentary confusion.
Keep It Together
One way to avoid a misunderstanding is to repeat the referenced noun. That would have been a good choice here: The mayorโs spokesperson has filed a complaint demanding that the mayor be prosecuted for perjury.
A pronoun also frequently substitutes for an entire phrase or clause. Thatโs whatโs happening in sentences starting with โitโ and a version of โto be.โ Technically, this is a post-noun because the reference comes after instead of before.
Carole King sang, โIt used to be so easy living here with you.โ A more concise lyric without the pronoun would be, โLiving here with you used to be so easy,โ but that probably wouldnโt have fit the songโs meter.
Pro-form, Not Pro Forma
Words functioning as parts of speech other than nouns can also refer back to an antecedent. The catch-all term for these substitute words is โpro-form.โ That could be, for example, a pro-adjective or pro-adverb. Or, as many grammarians do, you could just call them all pronouns.
Donโt confuse โpro-formโ with โpro forma,โ something done or created as a matter of form. You know, like a pretend interview for a position already filled.
I Donโt Understand What Youโre Talking About
When you get this feedback [did you see โthisโ as the pro-form for an entire sentence?], your reader or listener may be reacting literally, not argumentatively.
Here is a sentence from a mediation brief submitted to me:
โThe defendant knew the importance of this document.โ
Huh? What document? I wasted time going over the preceding pages again. Nope. The antecedent for โthisโ was missing. I would have to ask the author.
Not every reader will be so diligent. A judge may downgrade your brief if the judge canโt figure out your references. Any time you use โthis,โ โthatโ or โthose,โ make sure your reader understands the reference. The same goes for โher,โ โhisโ and โtheir.โ The reaction should not be โWhose?โ
Be Careful with Pro-Forms
You know your case better than anyone else. That can lead to forgetting to fill in the listenersโ or readersโ knowledge gaps. Make sure every pronoun or pro-form reference is clear.
A New Marketing Journal Designed for Lawyers
Every element of this beautiful guided journal has been designed to both motivate you and keep your marketing efforts on track. From Theda C. Snyder and Attorney at Work, the Lawyer’s Marketing Journal is the perfect place to capture all your great ideas, write down your daily tasks, notes and accomplishments โ and monitor your progress. Take control of your marketing and order your journal today.