The indefinite pronoun 'some' can take a singular or plural form of the verb. For example:
Some is better than nothing.
Some are better than others.
I, he, she, it, this and that are singular.
Pronouns such as he, she, it, and singular nouns take a singular form of the verb. For example, "He goes to school" or "She eats fast."
The singular form of the verb "wash" is "washes."
Neither is a singular verb.A verb with a singular subject has the form verb+s.She walks to work. - walks is the singular form of walk.The doctor flies to Spain every year. flies is the singular form of fly.
The pronoun 'he' is the third person, singular form and takes a singular verb, for example:John is coming, he is expected at five.The pronoun 'you' is both the singular and the plural form; a second person singular and plural (noun or pronoun) takes the same verb form, for example:Jane, you are a good friend.Class, you are all dismissed.
I, he, she, it, this and that are singular.
Pronouns such as he, she, it, and singular nouns take a singular form of the verb. For example, "He goes to school" or "She eats fast."
are takes the plural form
The singular form of the verb "wash" is "washes."
Neither is a singular verb.A verb with a singular subject has the form verb+s.She walks to work. - walks is the singular form of walk.The doctor flies to Spain every year. flies is the singular form of fly.
A singular subject always has a singular verb.
The pronoun 'he' is the third person, singular form and takes a singular verb, for example:John is coming, he is expected at five.The pronoun 'you' is both the singular and the plural form; a second person singular and plural (noun or pronoun) takes the same verb form, for example:Jane, you are a good friend.Class, you are all dismissed.
Does is the third person singular form of the verb do. Does is used with singular noun or pronoun subjects.
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
Sees A singular verb has the form - verb + s. walk does not have + s shirts has + s but it is not a verb it is a noun. fly is a verb but it does not have + s sees is a verb it is see + s
The indefinite pronoun "everybody" takes the singular form of the verb. For example, "Everybody is welcome to attend the event."
"Politics" is already plural in form, though it may take a singular verb.