No, committee is a noun.
"Committees" is the plural of committee.
The plural for the noun committee is committees.
Committee is singular. The plural form is committees.
No, committee is a singular noun. The plural form is committees.
Committee is singular. Committees is plural.
committee - committees
The plural form of the noun committee is committees.The plural possessive form is committees'.Example: All of the committees' reports are due on the tenth.
plural verb - were plural subject - boys The boys were hungry
Are is a plural present be verb. We are walking home. Were is a plural past be verb. They were looking for me. Have is a plural main verb or auxiliary verb. They have a dog. They have had a dog for years.
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...'.
Yes, when the subject is plural, you should use a plural verb to maintain subject-verb agreement. This means that the verb should agree in number with the subject, so if the subject is plural, the verb should be too.
No. Verbs do not have a plural form. The verb "were" is the past tense of is or are.