"How should the sentence above be rewritten to correct the subject-verb agreement error?"
In grammar, an agreement refers to the relationship between words in a sentence, where they have to match in features like number, gender, or person. This ensures that the elements in a sentence are in harmony and the sentence is grammatically correct.
The sentence with the correct antecedent agreement is:B. "The boys want their dessert now."The plural possessive adjective "their" takes the place of the plural noun "boys".
No, the sentence contains a subject-verb agreement error. It should be "She, Bob, and Bill found that it was difficult."
No, the correct subject-verb agreement should be: "Is either your mother or your father coming to the meeting?" In this sentence, 'is' matches with 'either', which is singular.
No, the sentence is incorrect. It should be "Neither Holly nor her sisters are going to the party" to ensure subject-verb agreement.
Yes, the sentence has a singular subject (one tragic effect), and a singular verb (massive flooding.)
It is correct.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
He agrees with you. Or he is in agreement with you.
A simple sentence.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
Yes. Best to keep the verb agreement, if possible.
The sentence "It lacks agreement Possible correct alternatives are He is the one of the men who does the work or He is one of the men who do the work" are not of correct grammar.
The sentence above does not use correct grammar and should be rewritten as the following: Thanks to the rain, I am going to sleep very well this evening.
The English sentence "Neither Kyle not his brother are interested in bask" does indeed show the correct subject-verb agreement. For further advice on grammatical matters, try the "Grammarly" website.
Jim and Mark have been friends since first grade.
"Where was I" is a correct interrogative form. The sentence could be rewritten in Subject-Verb form as "I was where?""Where" is an adverb complementing the verb "was."In a question the question word (where) usually comes at the beginning of the question:Where was I?If it was 'I was where?' then the emphasis would be on the word 'where' egA: I heard you were at the casino last night.B: I was where?!A: At the casino.B: No way, I don't gamble!