A1 Pronouns & Reference Grammar Test 3 – Academic English Foundations | IELTS TOEFL YDS
Master English pronouns and reference words through academic-style cohesion, abstract reference, and near-native traps. This A1 grammar test strengthens foundations for IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS.
Choose the best answer (A, B, or C) to complete each sentence.
Select according to reference clarity, number, ownership, and academic meaning.
Only one option is grammatically, logically, and academically correct.
RESULTS
#1. The experiment failed, but ___ provided valuable insights for future research.
#2. The students submitted their reports, and the instructor reviewed ___.
#3. This dataset is outdated. ___ from last year is more reliable.
#4. The laboratory updated ___ safety protocols after the inspection.
#5. My results are consistent, but hers are not. ___ need further analysis.
#6. These samples are contaminated. We cannot use ___.
#7. The proposal is complex, but ___ is clearly structured.
#8. This is not our equipment. It is ___. (belonging to them)
#9. The assistant lost her notes, but I still have ___.
#10. Those charts are difficult to read. Please revise ___.
#11. The new software is efficient. ___ reduces processing time significantly.
#12. These guidelines are outdated. ___ should be revised before publication.
#13. The professor discussed the theory and then applied ___ to a real case.
#14. That was an important discovery. ___ will influence future studies.
#15. Our department is smaller than ___, but it is more specialized. (referring to that department)
🧠 FULL TEACHING-LEVEL EXPLANATIONS (ALL 15)
🧩 1. but it provided valuable insights
Structural reason:
Subject position → subject pronoun.
Meaning logic:
“It” refers to the whole experiment as an abstract event.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic evaluation tone.
Why others fail:
• its → possessive adjective
• them → plural, wrong reference
Exam note:
“It” often replaces whole situations in TOEFL reading.
🧩 2. reviewed them
Structural reason:
Verb + object pronoun.
Meaning logic:
Reports receive the action.
Rhetorical effect:
Formal academic narration.
Why others fail:
• they → subject
• their → possessive
Exam note:
Object pronouns are very frequent in YDS.
🧩 3. That from last year
Structural reason:
“That” refers to something previously mentioned but distant.
Meaning logic:
Contrasts this dataset vs that one.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic comparison framing.
Why others fail:
• this → near
• these → plural
Exam note:
This/that contrasts are common in IELTS listening.
🧩 4. updated its safety protocols
Structural reason:
Possessive adjective + noun.
Meaning logic:
Protocols belong to the laboratory.
Rhetorical effect:
Institutional description.
Why others fail:
• it → no possession
• it’s → “it is”
Exam note:
its vs it’s is a top spelling-meaning trap.
🧩 5. They need further analysis
Structural reason:
“Hers” refers to plural “results” → they.
Meaning logic:
Plural abstract reference.
Rhetorical effect:
Scientific caution tone.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• them → object
Exam note:
Reference back to hidden plurals is common in TOEFL.
🧩 6. cannot use them
Structural reason:
Use + object pronoun, plural.
Meaning logic:
Multiple contaminated samples.
Rhetorical effect:
Laboratory instruction tone.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• their → possessive adjective
Exam note:
Plural object tracking is a classic listening trap.
🧩 7. but it is clearly structured
Structural reason:
It replaces “the proposal.”
Meaning logic:
One abstract document.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic evaluation.
Why others fail:
• its → needs noun
• that → would contrast another proposal
Exam note:
“It” often replaces abstract academic nouns.
🧩 8. It is theirs
Structural reason:
Possessive pronoun replaces “their equipment.”
Meaning logic:
Ownership without noun repetition.
Rhetorical effect:
Concise clarification.
Why others fail:
• their → needs noun
• them → object form
Exam note:
Theirs/mine/yours are frequent substitution traps.
🧩 9. I still have mine
Structural reason:
Possessive pronoun replaces “my notes.”
Meaning logic:
Ownership emphasis.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic personal reference.
Why others fail:
• my → needs noun
• me → object pronoun
Exam note:
Mine often appears in dialogue-style exam items.
🧩 10. revise them
Structural reason:
Charts = plural → them.
Meaning logic:
More than one chart.
Rhetorical effect:
Instructional academic tone.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• their → possessive adjective
Exam note:
Plural reference consistency is heavily tested.
🧩 11. It reduces processing time
Structural reason:
Software = singular uncountable → it.
Meaning logic:
Refers to the system.
Rhetorical effect:
Technical academic description.
Why others fail:
• this → would shift focus
• they → plural
Exam note:
Non-human it dominates TOEFL academic texts.
🧩 12. They should be revised
Structural reason:
Guidelines = plural → they.
Meaning logic:
Multiple rules.
Rhetorical effect:
Formal academic recommendation.
Why others fail:
• it → singular
• them → object form
Exam note:
Plural abstract nouns often test they.
🧩 13. applied it to a real case
Structural reason:
It replaces “the theory.”
Meaning logic:
One abstract concept.
Rhetorical effect:
Academic application framing.
Why others fail:
• its → possessive
• them → plural
Exam note:
“It” often refers to ideas, theories, methods.
🧩 14. It will influence future studies
Structural reason:
It replaces “that discovery.”
Meaning logic:
One important event.
Rhetorical effect:
Research impact framing.
Why others fail:
• its → possessive
• they → plural
Exam note:
“It will influence…” is a common TOEFL structure.
🧩 15. smaller than that
Structural reason:
“That” replaces “that department.”
Meaning logic:
Comparison between two departments.
Rhetorical effect:
Institutional comparison tone.
Why others fail:
• this → near reference
• these → plural
Exam note:
This/that substitution is common in IELTS comparison listening.






