Reference Words
Reference Words
This section explains the system used to refer forward or backward from where you are in a text
to other words or concepts. You use reference words to show the connections between ideas,
giving greater cohesion and clarity to your writing.
Reference words point backwards or forwards to other words or concepts that have already
appeared in the text or are about to appear in the text. In the majority of cases, the word has
already occurred in the text i.e. the reference word is pointing backwards.
In this sentence, these is a reference word pointing back to phases in the preceding sentence.
In this sentence, those is a reference word pointing forwards to the changes requiring only a
moderate level of financial support.
Reference words are important because they are another way you can strengthen the connections
between different elements of your text and clarify the progression of ideas.
3. Demonstratives
Demonstratives are similar to personal and possessive pronouns in that they refer to nouns
usually already present in the text. However, they have a stronger pointing quality – they identify
(point at) exactly which thing or things are being referred to.
The most common demonstratives are: this, that (singular), these, those (plural), such.
4. Comparatives
Comparatives are sometimes used as pronouns and sometimes as adjectives. You do not need to
be able to distinguish the two because, in both cases, they are being used to refer to something or
someone in the text.
Comparatives include words like: another, other, both, similar, the same, better, more, earlier,
later, previous, subsequent.
6. General reference
Usually a reference word is tied to a word, phrase or other grammatical element which is clearly
identifiable in the preceding or subsequent text. However, sometimes a reference word refers
back to an entire stretch of text – perhaps even a paragraph or two - without referring to any one
particular component of it. In this case, the reference word has the function of summarising the
preceding information.
The words most commonly used to do this are the demonstrative pronouns this and these.