Referring video object segmentation (RVOS) aims to segment the target instance referred by a given text expression in a video clip. The text expression normally contains sophisticated descriptions of the instance's appearance, actions, and relations with others. It is therefore rather difficult for an RVOS model to capture all these attributes correspondingly in the video; in fact, the model often favours more on the action- and relation-related visual attribute of the instance. This can end up with incomplete or even incorrect mask prediction of the target instance. In this paper, we tackle this problem by taking a subject-centric short text expression from the original long text expression. The short one retains only the appearance-related information of the target instance so that we can use it to focus the model's attention on the instance's appearance. We let the model make joint predictions using both long and short text expressions and introduce a long-short predictions intersection loss to align the joint predictions. Besides the improvement on the linguistic part, we also introduce a forward-backward visual consistency loss, which utilizes optical flows to warp visual features between the annotated frames and their temporal neighbors for consistency. We build our method on top of two state of the art transformer-based pipelines for end-to-end training. Extensive experiments on A2D-Sentences and JHMDB-Sentences datasets show impressive improvements of our method.