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"The students gathered in the library to study for their exams."
The soccer team just finished their practice.
The team members wanted to improve their skills.
The sentence "Sarah and Jane are enjoying their vacation" is an example where the italicized pronoun "their" agrees in number with its antecedents "Sarah and Jane."
I'm happy to help you with that. However, it seems like there is a typo in your sentence. Could you please provide the correct sentence for me to analyze?
Knew is past tense so are should be in past tense too. Past tense of are is were.We knew we were in trouble
Were. The subject of this sentence is plural (we) so the verb should be a plural verb, also the other verb (knew) is past tense. The past plural form of are is were. -- We knew we were in trouble.
It RAINS all right, for the whole weekend, so the fish were safe for another week.
The word "SEE" in the sentence is the base form of the verb "to see". Verbs have both form and tense. In this sentence, "see" is used in the present tense.
A treaty that agrees to peaceful resolution of problems. Not to be aggressive.
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I hope the council agrees to approve my resolution.
He agrees with you. Or he is in agreement with you.
There isn't really a scientific solution to societies problems. The problems don't disappear over-night. The problems will only go away if everyone agrees that they are problems and that they need to be changed.
It RAINS for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week is not grammatically correct. Rains is present tense; were safe is past tense.Correct: It rained for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week.
Academia refers to the world of education and scholarship. For example, "After completing her PhD, she decided to pursue a career in academia as a university professor."
Celebrate is the verb in the sentence.