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Learn to spot — and fix — those sneaky moments when pronouns change in the middle of a sentence.
Imagine you are telling a friend a story about your soccer game. Halfway through, you accidentally switch from saying "I kicked the ball" to "they kicked the ball" — even though you're still talking about yourself! Your friend would be confused. That confusing switch is exactly what a pronoun shift is, and writers have been working to avoid it for centuries.
So, here's the big question this lesson answers: How do you keep your pronouns steady and clear so your readers always know who you're talking about?
Before we can fix pronoun shifts, we need to understand two key ideas: pronoun number and pronoun person. Let's break each one down.
Pronoun number tells you whether a pronoun refers to one thing or more than one. A singular pronoun (like he, she, or it) means one. A plural pronoun (like they or we) means more than one.
Pronoun person tells you whose viewpoint the sentence comes from. There are three persons:
The diagram below shows all the main pronouns organized by person (rows) and number (columns). When you write, you want to stay in the same row and column — don't jump around!
Here's the important rule: within a sentence or paragraph, stay in the same box. If you start with first person singular ("I"), keep using first person singular pronouns ("me," "my"). If you switch to a different row (person) or a different column (number) without a reason, you've made a pronoun shift.
Pronoun shifts usually sneak in when you're not paying attention. Let's look at the two main kinds of shifts and see what goes wrong.
A shift in person means the sentence changes who is "talking" or being talked about.
See the problem? The sentence starts with I (first person) but then jumps to you (second person). The writer means the same person both times. Here's the fix:
A shift in number means the sentence changes from singular to plural (or the other way around) when talking about the same thing.
"Student" is singular (one person), but "their" is plural (more than one person). Even though "their" is sometimes used casually, you can fix the mismatch like this:
Follow this four-step flowchart every time you proofread your writing. With practice, spotting shifts will become automatic!
Let's organize all the shift types you might run into. The table below shows common shifts, why they happen, and how to fix them.
| Shift Type | Incorrect Example | Problem | Corrected Version |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st → 2nd person | I love rainy days because you can read inside. | Jumps from "I" to "you" | I love rainy days because I can read inside. |
| 3rd → 2nd person | A runner should stretch before you race. | "Runner" is 3rd person, "you" is 2nd | A runner should stretch before he or she races. |
| Singular → Plural | Each camper must pack their own bag. | "Each camper" is singular, "their" is plural | All campers must pack their own bags. |
| Plural → Singular | The dogs wagged its tail. | "Dogs" is plural, "its" is singular | The dogs wagged their tails. |
| 1st → 3rd person | We went to the park, and a person had a great time. | Switches from "we" to "a person" | We went to the park, and we had a great time. |
Let's walk through fixing a paragraph that has multiple pronoun shifts, step by step.
Even good writers make pronoun shifts. Here are the traps you'll want to watch out for — and some tips that make the rule easier to follow.
| Common Pitfall | Why It Happens | Quick Fix Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Using "you" in formal writing | We say "you" in everyday speech, so it sneaks into essays | Replace "you" with the specific noun or "one" / "a person" |
| "Everyone… they" | "Everyone" feels plural, but it's grammatically singular | Rewrite with a plural subject: "All people… they" |
| Switching mid-paragraph | Long paragraphs make you forget how you started | After drafting, circle every pronoun and check they match |
| Using "we" consistently ✓ | Starting with "we" and keeping it is natural for group writing | This is a strength! Keep doing it. |
| Making both nouns and pronouns plural ✓ | Plural forms avoid awkward "he or she" chains | This is a strength! It's the smoothest fix. |
Once you've mastered pronoun shifts in number and person, you'll be ready for more advanced grammar topics in the years ahead. Here's a quick preview of how this skill connects to bigger ideas.
| What You Learn Now | What Comes Next |
|---|---|
| Keeping pronouns consistent in person | Maintaining a consistent point of view in narratives (first-person story vs. third-person story) |
| Keeping pronouns consistent in number | Full pronoun-antecedent agreement — making sure every pronoun clearly matches the noun it replaces |
| Spotting shifts in a single sentence | Checking for shifts across an entire essay, including shifts in verb tense (past vs. present) |
| Fixing awkward "he or she" phrases | Understanding inclusive language and the evolving use of singular "they" in modern English |
Grammar rules aren't just about "being correct." They're tools that make your writing clear so your reader can focus on your ideas instead of getting confused by shifting pronouns. The better you get at this now, the stronger every essay, story, and email you write will be.
Time to test your skills! Try each problem before clicking "Show Answer."
In this lesson, you learned that pronouns have two important features: person (first, second, or third) and number (singular or plural). A pronoun shift happens when a writer changes person or number in the middle of a sentence or paragraph without a good reason, which confuses the reader. You practiced identifying shifts — like jumping from "I" to "you", or from a singular noun like "a student" to the plural pronoun "they" — and you learned a simple four-step method to find and fix them.
The most important strategies to remember: circle every pronoun when you proofread, make sure they all "match" in person and number, and when in doubt, make everything plural — it's usually the smoothest fix. Finally, remember that not every pronoun change is a mistake. If you're talking about two different people, using different pronouns is perfectly fine. Keep practicing, and you'll catch these shifts like a pro!