The pronoun 'he' is the third person, singular form and takes a singular verb, for example:
The pronoun 'you' is both the singular and the plural form; a second person singular and plural (noun or pronoun) takes the same verb form, for example:
"He" takes a singular verb, while "you" can take both singular and plural verbs depending on whether it is used to address one person or multiple people.
No, a singular subject should take a singular verb. The verb should match the number of the subject in the sentence.
The pronoun "they" takes a plural verb. For example, "They are going to the store."
The singular or plural form of "any" depends on the context of the sentence. When "any" is used in a negative or interrogative sentence, it typically takes a singular verb. When used in an affirmative sentence, it can take a singular or plural verb depending on the context.
To write a subject-verb agreement sentence, make sure that the subject and verb in the sentence match in number. For example, in a sentence like "She eats pizza," "eats" agrees with the singular subject "She." In contrast, for a plural subject like "They," you would use a plural verb form, as in "They eat pizza."
The verb "attend" can be singular or plural depending on the subject it is paired with. For example, "she attends" is singular while "they attend" is plural.
Pronouns that take a plural verb are: we, you, they, and these; and any combination of singular pronouns will take a plural verb, such as 'You and I...'.
The pronoun "they" takes a plural verb. For example, "They are going to the store."
To write a subject-verb agreement sentence, make sure that the subject and verb in the sentence match in number. For example, in a sentence like "She eats pizza," "eats" agrees with the singular subject "She." In contrast, for a plural subject like "They," you would use a plural verb form, as in "They eat pizza."
are takes the plural form
rule 1:a singular subject requires a singular verb rule2:a plural subject requires a plural verb rule3:singular indefinite pronouns take singular verbs rule4:plural indefinite pronouns take plural verbs rule5:a collective noun takes a singular verb when the group it names acts as one single unit rule6:a collective noun takes a plural verb when the group it names acts individually rule7:compound subjects joined by"AND" take plural verbs.However ,when these compound subjects are considered one item or reffer to one person or thing, then it requires a singular verb rule8:compound subjects connected by or,nor,either...or and neither...nor,the verb agrees with the nearer subject. rule9:titles,amounts,and measurmaents take singular verbs rule10:plural nouns preceded by"a number of" take plural verbs rule11:plural nouns preceded by"the number of" take singular verbs
As a collective noun, it can take either a singular or plural noun. If, however, it follows the definite article the, you should use a singular verb, as in The number of students taking advanced math classes has fallen over the last ten years.
Headquarters is both singular and plural.
In Spanish, verbs do not have singular or plural forms. Verbs agree with the subject in number, but this is indicated by the subject pronoun or noun used, rather than the verb ending.
The verb reviewed is used after both singular and plural nouns.
No, the word 'minutes' is a plural noun and should take a plural verb in a sentence. For example: "The minutes of the meeting were distributed to all attendees."
It takes a plural verb. example, His mathematics are weak.
The word "research" typically takes a singular verb. For example, "Research shows that..." is correct, as opposed to "Research show that..."