I am reading Chapter 7 of Manhattan Sentence Correction book. It is called "pronoun" but it seems to use some adjectives.
For example
"The most common pronoun mistakes involve the singular it and its, and the plural they, them and their. Whenever you see one of those five pronouns ...."
But "their" and "its" are possessive adjectives, not pronouns, right? See here
Also in the problem set:
"All students need his or her own copy of the textbook in order to take the class"
"His" and "here" are adjectives, right?
The correct phrase would be
"All students need their own copy of the textbook in order to take the class"
They seem adjectives bu acting like pronouns because they have an antecedent. I am a bit confused about it. Instead other adjectives do not have antecedent ("The white cat is outside")
EDIT: Also in the solutions it says "our is a pronoun, but first persons pronouns never have antecedents in the sentence". Isn't our a possessive adjective?
The phrase is:
"Our cat is cuter than the cats in the shelter"