JbhB682 Wrote:Hello - in D, can the possessive pronoun (ITS) refer back to a noun that is not in the possessive format ?
A possessive pronoun can indeed refer back to a noun that is not possessive:
The cat licked its paws.You might be remembering that the reverse is not true.
A non-possessive pronoun cannot refer to a possessive noun:
The cat's toys were lost under the couch where it could not reach them. (WRONG)
This is wrong because "it" cannot have "the cat's" as the antecedent. The only singular, non-possessive noun in the sentence is "couch"; replacing "it" with "couch" reveals the meaning problem.
JbhB682 Wrote:"ITS" is a possessive pronoun. The antecedent of the possessive pronoun should be a noun in the possessive format (specifically X's Y)
In option D - "Company" is NOT in the format of X's Y
Hence"ITS" cannot refer to "Company"
Hence I eliminated D
Is this accurate or not a good elimination strategy ?
Here's the problem in (D): "the company" is not a noun at all! It's an adjective! So the "its" could only refer to the singular nouns "press release" or maybe "plan," neither of which make sense.
(D) is like this:
The new cat toys were lost under the couch out of its reach. (WRONG)