og-verbal-review-sc-19-t878.html
Unfortunately, the entire forum has been locked. I couldnt reply to that particular thread.
this is correct in this instance, but this is not a general rule.
the general rule is that the pronoun, by default, refers to the noun that plays the same grammatical role in its own clause. so:
* if the pronoun is a subject (as is the case here), then it refers by default to the subject of the other clause.
* if the pronoun is a direct object, then it refers by default to the direct object of the other clause. (i.e., "take the pizza out of the box and put it on the table" --> "it" refers to "pizza" since both are direct objects)
In the last example, why is it that "it" refers to antecedent Pizza and not Box ? I am not sure. Can you please help?
Thanks
Voodoo