breaks
The presence tense is "break" unless the subject is third person singular, for which the proper form is "breaks". (This is the simple present tense.)
"Break" is a singular noun. Its plural form is "breaks."
Three singular subject pronouns are I, he, she. Note, the pronoun you can be singular or plural and subject or object.
Only in the singular second-person (you were). A singular subject in the first and third persons uses "was."
No, a singular subject should take a singular verb. The verb should match the number of the subject in the sentence.
The singular subject personal pronouns are: I, you, he, she, it. The plural subject personal pronouns are: we, you, they.
The noun breaks is the plural form for the singular noun break. The word breaks is also the third person, singular present of the verb to break.
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).
A singular verb must be matched with a singular subject. This means that when the subject of a sentence is singular, the verb form should also be singular to ensure grammatical agreement. For example, in the sentence "The cat runs," both "cat" (singular subject) and "runs" (singular verb) agree in number.
A singular subject always has a singular verb.
A singular subject has a singular verb form.He/ she/ it/ and singular noun subjects like the boy/ my brother are singular subject and the verb form for singular subjects is verb + sHe likes ice cream. My brother likes ice cream. The dog likes ice cream.Plural subjects have a verb from with no -s.They like ice cream. The dogs like ice cream.This is true for present tense
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.