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For example:

A professor said that he loves teaching.

Is it possible for "he" to refer to "a professor"?

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  • It would hjelp us to give you a good answer if you explained why you think that something might be wrong with that sentence.
    – JeremyC
    Commented Dec 8, 2018 at 23:20
  • @JeremyC I'm assuming the sentence is correct. Though I figured that there was a chance that it wasn't correct because "a professor" is indefinite. Commented Dec 8, 2018 at 23:30
  • It's only a problem if the professor is a woman. Commented Dec 9, 2018 at 15:29

2 Answers 2

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There is absolutely nothing wrong with that sentence. A personal pronoun (e.g. he, they, she, etc) can refer to a proper noun denoting a person, (e.g. John Smith, Mary Patel) or a non-specific one (a professor, my mother, the children, a manager, the chef). John Smith said that he likes beer. My mother said that she was tired. The children said that they wanted ice-cream. Mr Jones says he is thirsty. If a customer wants to speak to a manager, they (or "he or she") can phone after 10 o’clock. Peter complained to the chef about the meal. She wasn’t very helpful.

Personal pronouns

Pronouns: personal (I, me, you, him, it, they, etc.)

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If a pronoun of definite gender appears in the same context as a noun of indefinite gender, without any change of context in-between, you can safely assume the pronoun refers back to the noun. Otherwise this would be very confusing to English speakers.

Examples:

The doctor calmly walked into the operating room. "Is the patient sedated?" she (the doctor) asked the anesthesiologist. "Yes, doctor," he (the anesthesiologist) replied.

Although the senator repeatedly ran and was elected on a campaign of devout religious principle and scrupulous moral virtue, after his (the senator's) death, it was revealed he had as many as four illegitimate children.

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