TOEIC Link Part 5: personnel versus personal
Personnel and personal are separated by a single letter, yet they are different parts of speech with unrelated meanings. Personnel is a noun for the people employed by a company. Personal is an adjective meaning private or individual. Because the spellings are so close, Part 5 likes to drop both into the options and let careless readers grab the wrong one. The fix is not vocabulary but grammar: decide whether the slot needs a noun or a modifier first. For the general habit of letting the slot — not the sound — decide, see word choice versus word form.
The core rule: a group of people versus a private quality
- personnel is a noun meaning the staff or employees of an organization, taken as a group. It is usually treated as plural or collective: All personnel must wear ID badges. / The airline is hiring additional ground personnel. / Questions go to the personnel department. Think "the people on the payroll."
- personal is an adjective meaning private, individual, or relating to one specific person: Please do not bring personal items into the lab. / She took a day of personal leave. / For personal reasons, he declined the offer. Think "belonging to you, not the company."
A memory hook: personnel ends like personnel file — it names people. Personal is an adjective like national or regional; the -al ending marks a describing word.
How to read the slot
- Blank is the subject or object — a thing the sentence is about → personnel (noun). In all (blank) must attend, the (blank) were notified, the slot is the subject, so it needs the noun personnel.
- Blank sits before another noun, describing it → personal (adjective). In (blank) belongings, (blank) information, (blank) leave, the slot modifies the following noun, so it needs the adjective personal.
- Stress can confirm it when you read aloud. Personnel stresses the last syllable (per-son-NEL) and names a group; personal stresses the first (PER-son-al) and describes. The grammar slot is the primary test, but stress is a useful backup.
The fastest test: if the blank is a noun (subject or object), choose personnel; if the blank describes a following noun, choose personal.
Common Part 5 traps
- "personnel + noun" looks tempting but is usually wrong. Personnel is itself a noun, so stacking it before another noun (personnel reasons) is rarely the answer. When the blank clearly modifies a noun, the adjective personal is almost always correct: personal reasons, personal data, personal belongings.
- Subject-verb agreement leans plural. Personnel usually takes a plural verb in TOEIC contexts: All personnel are required to..., not is required. If the verb is plural and the subject slot is blank, personnel fits the number.
- Do not confuse it with personable. A third look-alike, personable, means "pleasant and friendly." It is an adjective describing character, not staff or privacy, and is a distractor only when the meaning is clearly about someone's manner.
Quick check
Decide whether the slot needs a noun or an adjective, then choose.
- All (blank) are required to complete the safety training by Friday.
- Employees may store (blank) items in the lockers provided.
- The (blank) office handles questions about benefits and payroll.
- She requested a few days of (blank) leave to handle a family matter.
Answers: 1. personnel (subject noun, the group of staff) 2. personal (adjective before items) 3. personnel (modifying office as the staff/HR function — the fixed compound personnel office) 4. personal (adjective before leave).
The takeaway
One letter separates personnel from personal, but they never compete on meaning — only on spelling. Read the slot: a noun for the staff is personnel; a modifier meaning private is personal. For more near-identical pairs that the grammar slot decides, see principal versus principle and complement versus compliment.