Singular
You is second person, singular. It is also second person, plural.
It is plural: one innings, two innings.
The pronouns used with the verb 'to be' are:I am (first person, singular)You are (second person, singular)He/she/it is (third person, singular)We are (first person, plural)You are (second person, plural)They are (third person, plural)
No. 'I' is the first person (singular) and 'we' is the first person plural. You is the second person, whether you is singular or plural.
No, the first is singular and the second is plural/
Have can be both singular and plural, but has can only be singular. So you are partly right.Have is used with the first and second persons singular and with all persons plural and plural noun subjects:I/You/We/They have a large fat dog. The boys have a large fat dog.Has is used only with the third person singular and singular noun subjects:He/She has a small dirty dog. The doctorhas a small dirty dog
The plural for the first person singular pronoun 'I' is 'we'. Example sentence:I can go to pick up Mandy or we can go together.The pronoun 'you' is the second person, singular or plural.
First person singular Second person singular Third person singular First person plural Second person plural Third person plural frame story episcopal journalistic Mosaic stream of...
The third person singular is has (he has, she has, it has).The first and second person singular is have (I have, you have).The first, second, and third person plural is have (we have, you have, they have).
No, was is past tense. It is used for first and third person singular subjects.I was (first person singular)We were (first person plural)You were (second person singular and plural)He/She/It was (third person singular)They were (third person plural)
No, was is past tense. It is used for first and third person singular subjects.I was (first person singular)We were (first person plural)You were (second person singular and plural)He/She/It was (third person singular)They were (third person plural)
Use "was" when referring to a singular subject, and use "were" when referring to plural subjects or the second person singular (you). For example: "He was happy" (singular subject) vs. "They were happy" (plural subject) or "If I were you, I would go" (second person singular).