Your question is not clear.
If you mean "what is the plural of the word subject?" - then you just add -s to make the plural form subjects
If you mean "What is a plural subject in a sentence?" a plural subject in a sentence is a subject that refers to more than one thing.
The boys ate the ice cream - in this sentence the subject 'boys' is plural - boys means more than one boy.
The boy ate the ice cream - in this sentence the subject 'boy' is singular - boy means one boy.
The plural of subject is subjects.
The plural of subject is subjects.
The plural of the word "subject" is "subjects".
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.
Peddler Pete is the subject but it is not a plural subject.
The singular form of subject pronouns includes: I, you, he, she, it. The plural form includes: we, you, they.
yes
The subject of the sentence "there" is a plural pronoun, identified as plural by the verb for a plural subject "are"The direct object noun "moose" is a plural noun, identified as plural by the adjective "more", indicating a quantity.The subject of the adverbial clause is "people", a plural noun.
They have to agree. If you have a plural subject tehn you have a plural verb form. eg subject - They plural verb form - have eg They have a new car. subject - She singular verb form - has eg She has a new car subject - We plural verb form - like eg We like ice cream subject - He plural verb form - likes eg He likes ice cream
An example of a plural verb and plural subject is "The dogs bark loudly." In this sentence, "dogs" is the plural subject, and "bark" is the plural verb that agrees with the subject.
It is not called a plural verb but plural form. Verbs only have singular and plural forms in the present tense. The verb form must agree with the subject eg plural subject + plural verb form The baby crawls well now -- singular subject = baby, singular verb form = crawls The babies crawl well now -- plural subject = babies, plural verb form = crawl
Verbs only have a plural or singular form when the subject is plural or singular. plural subject - books - The books cost a lot of money. plural subject - they - They cost a lot of money singular subject - book - The book costs a lot of money. singular subject - it - It costs a lot of money. For singular subjects add -s to the verb.