A1 Pronouns & Reference Grammar Test 2 – Academic English Foundations | IELTS TOEFL YDS
Strengthen your control of English pronouns and reference words through academic-style sentences and contrast traps. This A1 grammar test supports IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation.
Strengthen your control of English pronouns and reference words through academic-style sentences and contrast traps. This A1 grammar test supports IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation.
RESULTS
#1. This tablet is not my device. ___ belongs to the research office.
#2. The assistant prepared the documents, and the supervisor reviewed ___.
#3. These samples are not ours. They are ___.
#4. The laboratory upgraded ___ safety system last year.
#5. I found my notes, but she cannot find ___.
#6. This report is outdated. ___ one on the desk is the revised version.
#7. Those diagrams are complex. Please simplify ___.
#8. Our experiment is finished. ___ was approved by the ethics committee.
#9. The students brought ___ laptops to the workshop.
#10. These results are preliminary. ___ should be verified with further testing.
#11. My dataset is small, but ___ is much larger. (referring to yours)
#12. The professor thanked the assistants and praised ___.
#13. That software is outdated. We need to replace ___.
#14. These are her credentials. ___ are required for the application.
#15. This method is reliable, but ___ is more efficient. (referring to that one)
🧠 FULL TEACHING-LEVEL EXPLANATIONS (ALL 15)
🧩 1. It belongs to the research office.
Structural reason:
Subject position → subject pronoun.
Meaning logic:
“It” replaces “this tablet.”
Rhetorical effect:
Avoids repetition in academic description.
Why others fail:
• its → possessive adjective (needs a noun)
• it’s → “it is”
Exam note:
It is heavily used for non-human reference in TOEFL texts.
🧩 2. reviewed them
Structural reason:
Verb + object → object pronoun.
Meaning logic:
The documents receive the action.
Rhetorical effect:
Formal reporting style.
Why others fail:
• they → subject form
• their → possessive adjective
Exam note:
Preposition/verb + them is a classic YDS pattern.
🧩 3. They are theirs
Structural reason:
Possessive pronoun replaces “their samples.”
Meaning logic:
Ownership without repeating the noun.
Rhetorical effect:
Concise academic clarification.
Why others fail:
• them → object
• their → needs a noun
Exam note:
Mine/yours/hers/theirs are common substitution traps.
🧩 4. upgraded its safety system
Structural reason:
Possessive adjective + noun.
Meaning logic:
The system belongs to the laboratory.
Rhetorical effect:
Professional institutional description.
Why others fail:
• it → no ownership
• it’s → “it is”
Exam note:
its vs it’s is one of the most tested distinctions.
🧩 5. she cannot find hers
Structural reason:
Possessive pronoun replaces “her notes.”
Meaning logic:
Ownership without repeating “notes.”
Rhetorical effect:
Natural spoken-academic flow.
Why others fail:
• her → object/possessive adjective
• she → subject pronoun
Exam note:
Possessive pronouns are frequent in short dialogue questions.
🧩 6. That one on the desk…
Structural reason:
“That” refers to something farther or already identified.
Meaning logic:
Contrasts this report vs that one.
Rhetorical effect:
Clear academic comparison.
Why others fail:
• these → plural
• they → pronoun, not determiner here
Exam note:
This/that contrasts are common in IELTS listening.
🧩 7. simplify them
Structural reason:
Diagrams = plural → them.
Meaning logic:
More than one object.
Rhetorical effect:
Instructional academic tone.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• their → possessive adjective
Exam note:
Plural reference tracking is a common listening trap.
🧩 8. It was approved
Structural reason:
Experiment = singular → it.
Meaning logic:
Refers to the whole project.
Rhetorical effect:
Formal institutional reporting.
Why others fail:
• its → needs a noun
• they → plural
Exam note:
“It was approved” is very frequent in TOEFL academic style.
🧩 9. brought their laptops
Structural reason:
Possessive adjective + noun.
Meaning logic:
Laptops belong to students.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic clarity.
Why others fail:
• they → subject
• them → object
Exam note:
Their/they/them confusion is very common in A1–A2.
🧩 10. They should be verified
Structural reason:
Results = plural subject → they.
Meaning logic:
Plural reference.
Rhetorical effect:
Scientific caution tone.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• them → object
Exam note:
Plural subject control is critical in YDS.
🧩 11. but yours is much larger
Structural reason:
Possessive pronoun replaces “your dataset.”
Meaning logic:
Ownership without repeating the noun.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic comparison.
Why others fail:
• your → needs a noun
• you → subject pronoun
Exam note:
Yours/mine/hers often appear in short-dialogue TOEFL items.
🧩 12. praised them
Structural reason:
Verb + object.
Meaning logic:
The assistants receive praise.
Rhetorical effect:
Professional evaluation tone.
Why others fail:
• they → subject
• their → possessive adjective
Exam note:
Object pronouns after verbs are very frequent.
🧩 13. replace it
Structural reason:
Software = singular → it.
Meaning logic:
One system.
Rhetorical effect:
Technical academic decision framing.
Why others fail:
• its → possessive
• them → plural
Exam note:
Non-human it dominates TOEFL reading.
🧩 14. They are required
Structural reason:
Credentials = plural → they.
Meaning logic:
Multiple documents.
Rhetorical effect:
Administrative academic style.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• them → object
Exam note:
Plural abstract nouns often test they.
🧩 15. but that is more efficient
Structural reason:
“That” refers to the other method.
Meaning logic:
Contrast between two items.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic comparison framing.
Why others fail:
• this → near reference
• these → plural
Exam note:
This/that contrasts appear frequently in listening comprehension.






