A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun. For example :
<span>I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everybody, etc.
In the sentences above the right answer lies in the option :
</span><span>B. We returned our books to the library.
</span>OUR is the pronoun.
Answer:
1. You didn't know
2. Teacher gave you extra time
3. Lost it
4. Teacher lost it
You could ask them to make a book and then grade it.
The answer is <em>c: Each of these women runs </em>their<em> own business</em>. The correct use for pronoum-antecedent agreement in this sentence is putting the possessive adjective her, because each of + women has a singular verb and her is the possessive for she. <em>Each of these women runs </em><em>her</em><em> own business.</em> Another sentence would be different: Each of these <em>people</em> has <em>their</em> own business.