The present tense of "break" is "break." For example, "I break the glass."
Three singular subject pronouns are I, he, she. Note, the pronoun you can be singular or plural and subject or object.
No, "were" is a plural verb form. When the subject is singular, you should use "was."
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.
The singular form of subject pronouns includes: I, you, he, she, it. The plural form includes: we, you, they.
If you use it with a singular subject it is correct: It makes no sense to me. - singular subject = it The example makes no sense. - singular subject = example Compare: They make no sense to me. - plural subject = they
A singular subject always has a singular verb.
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.
Has is a verb.Has is the third person singular form of have. We use has when the subject of the sentence is a singular subject. egHe has a new car. -- He = a singular subjectCompare that with this sentence -- They have a new car -- They = plural subjectThe doctor has a new car. -- the doctor = singular subject
Has is a verb.Has is the third person singular form of have. We use has when the subject of the sentence is a singular subject. egHe has a new car. -- He = a singular subjectCompare that with this sentence -- They have a new car -- They = plural subjectThe doctor has a new car. -- the doctor = singular subject
The rules for subject verb agreement are that a singular subject requires a singular verb. Plurals subjects need plural verbs. For example, the singular subjects John takes the singular verb runs, or (John runs).
A singular subject pronoun refers to the person or thing performing the action in a sentence (e.g., he, she, it). A singular object pronoun refers to the person or thing receiving the action in a sentence (e.g., him, her, it).