No, in this sentence Sarah and I love Cookie Dough Bites. like is not plural
curricula is a plural noun so to agree it takes a plural verb form.Curriculums is also acceptable for the pluural of curriculum.
The personal pronoun that is used for singular or plural is you.The pronoun 'you' can take the place of a singular, plural , or a compound antecedent.Examples:Jack, I've made lunch for you. (singular)Boys, I've made lunch for you. (plural)Jack and Jill, I've made lunch for you. (plural)
No, a singular subject should take a singular verb. The verb should match the number of the subject in the sentence.
"I" and "you" are both personal pronouns that are considered second person, but they take different forms in subject-verb agreement. "I" takes a singular verb form, while "you" takes a plural verb form in English grammar. This is a standard convention in English to distinguish between singular and plural subjects.
Pronouns that take a plural verb are: we, you, they, and these; and any combination of singular pronouns will take a plural verb, such as 'You and I...'.
A plural VERB
a singular or plural verb, depending on the noun closest to the verb
Tom and Jerry present is correct. Tom and Jerry form a compound subject, and compound subjects take the plural form of a verb.
rule 1:a singular subject requires a singular verb rule2:a plural subject requires a plural verb rule3:singular indefinite pronouns take singular verbs rule4:plural indefinite pronouns take plural verbs rule5:a collective noun takes a singular verb when the group it names acts as one single unit rule6:a collective noun takes a plural verb when the group it names acts individually rule7:compound subjects joined by"AND" take plural verbs.However ,when these compound subjects are considered one item or reffer to one person or thing, then it requires a singular verb rule8:compound subjects connected by or,nor,either...or and neither...nor,the verb agrees with the nearer subject. rule9:titles,amounts,and measurmaents take singular verbs rule10:plural nouns preceded by"a number of" take plural verbs rule11:plural nouns preceded by"the number of" take singular verbs
The general rule of subject-verb agreement is that a subject must agree with its verb in number and person. This means that singular subjects take singular verbs, while plural subjects take plural verbs. For example, "He runs fast" (singular) versus "They run fast" (plural). Additionally, when dealing with compound subjects, the verb should agree with the subject that is closest to it if they are connected by "or" or "nor."
A plural verb
Subjects and verbs must agree in number and personVerb agreement is a matching relation between subject and verb, the main rule of agreement is:singular subjects go with singular verb phrasesplural subjects go with plural verb phrases.In present tense (3rd person) - if the noun is singular the verb must have an -s. If the noun is plural the verb doesn't have an -s.The bench needs cleaning ( singular subject - bench, verb - need+s)The benches need cleaning (plural subject - benches, verb - need)The flower looks beautiful. The flowers look beautiful.Verbs have singular and plural forms only in the present tense. In the past tense there is no agreement problem as the verb doesn't change.The flower looked beautiful. The flowers looked beautiful.Be verb has plural and singular forms.Presentam - singular, with I as subject. I am ready.are - plural, with we, you, they or plural subjects. We are ready. The cars are ready.is - singular, with he,she,it or singular subjects. She is ready. The car is ready.Pastwas- singular, with I, he, she, it or singular subjects. He was ready. The car was ready.were- plural, with we, you, they or plural subjects. We were ready. The cars were ready
These nouns are always plural and they always take plural verbs: * glasses * pants/trousers * shorts * pajamas * jeans * people * police * scissors
Verbal subjects follow several key rules: The subject must agree in number with the verb (singular vs. plural). Collective nouns can be singular or plural depending on whether the group acts as a unit or individually. Indefinite pronouns (like "everyone" or "some") often take singular verbs. Titles of works, even if plural in form, take singular verbs. When subjects are joined by "and," the verb is typically plural. With subjects joined by "or" or "nor," the verb agrees with the nearer subject. Inverted sentences (like questions) still follow subject-verb agreement rules. Intervening phrases do not affect subject-verb agreement. Compound subjects may require a singular or plural verb based on context. In sentences starting with "there is" or "there are," the subject follows the verb, affecting agreement.
A plural verb
curricula is a plural noun so to agree it takes a plural verb form.Curriculums is also acceptable for the pluural of curriculum.
Subject-verb agreement rules state that a subject must agree with its verb in number (singular or plural). For singular subjects, use singular verbs, and for plural subjects, use plural verbs. Examples: The cat runs fast. (singular) The dogs bark loudly. (plural) She writes a letter. (singular) They play soccer. (plural) The team is winning. (singular collective noun) In collective nouns, the verb can be singular or plural based on context, while indefinite pronouns like "everyone" or "nobody" always take singular verbs.