Singular is a referance to a individual item or being. i.e. 'he' is singular, 'they' would be plural
She is singular, a pronoun that stands in place of a singular proper noun. It needs a singular verb. "What has she said about me?" the boy asked his friend. However, you could just write: "What did she say about me?"
The noun 'people' is the plural form of the singular noun person.Examples of the noun 'person' used as a subject in a sentence:The person in charge is the general manager. (subject of the sentence)I didn't hear what the person said. (subject of the relative clause)
Don't know what an insubordinate clause is, but I do know that "was" is singular, and "were" is plural. 2nd person (you) is an exception, you use "were" in both singular and plural: You were (singular, one person) You were (plural, all of you) Otherwise, like I said, you just use "was" in 1st person and 3rd person singular, and "were" in 1st and 3rd plural: I was (1st person singular) He/she/it was (3rd person singular) We were (1st person plural) They were (3rd person plural)
Three singular subject pronouns are I, he, she. Note, the pronoun you can be singular or plural and subject or object.
No, the word "he" is a singular pronoun; a word that takes the place of a singular noun for a male as the subject of a sentence or phrase. Example sentence:My dad said that he could pick us up after the movie.
No, "were" is a plural verb form. When the subject is singular, you should use "was."
No, a singular subject should take a singular verb. The verb should match the number of the subject in the sentence.
The singular form of subject pronouns includes: I, you, he, she, it. The plural form includes: we, you, they.
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 subject always has a singular verb.
In grammar, subject-verb agreement dictates that a singular subject should take a singular verb. This means that the verb form should match the number of the subject, either singular or plural. For example, "She runs" uses a singular verb form ("runs") to agree with the singular subject "she."
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.