Seen is the past participle of see. See / saw / seen.
It can have a singular or plural subject:
singular -- I have seen the movie.
plural -- They have seen the movie.
The verb "attend" can be singular or plural depending on the subject it is paired with. For example, "she attends" is singular while "they attend" is plural.
As an auxiliary verb will is without number: He will go; they will go. As a main verb, it may be singular or plural: I will this to my heirs; they will it to their heirs.
"Is" is the singular form of the verb "to be," used with singular subjects. "Are" is the plural form used with plural subjects.
"Has" is a verb that is paired with a singular noun or pronouns as in: Bob has,he has, she has or it has. Plural nouns would use have, such as, The people have, we have, they have, you (all) have. Of course , have is also used with the singular pronoun I , I have.
Have and has are verbs. Has in the singular form of have. They are both used with the past participle of verbs in perfect verb phrases.She has been to Shanghai. - singular subject sheThe doctor has visited Jack. - singular subject doctorWe have seen the movie. - plural subject weThe boys have come home. - plural subject boys
The verb reviewed is used after both singular and plural nouns.
Singular - CREWS = plural. The problem is that it can take a singular or plural verb form. When the word is viewed as a collective noun and its members act as a collectivity, the verb should be plural. ex: The crew ARE tired. When the verb is seen as a unit, as a whole, it takes a singular form: ex. The crew IS made up of 20 people.
The verb "attend" can be singular or plural depending on the subject it is paired with. For example, "she attends" is singular while "they attend" is plural.
It's a verb so it can't really be singular or plural, but it has to be the verb of a singular subject.
Singular. Plural is: they are, have and do.
As an auxiliary verb will is without number: He will go; they will go. As a main verb, it may be singular or plural: I will this to my heirs; they will it to their heirs.
"Is" is the singular form of the verb "to be," used with singular subjects. "Are" is the plural form used with plural subjects.
"Has" is a verb that is paired with a singular noun or pronouns as in: Bob has,he has, she has or it has. Plural nouns would use have, such as, The people have, we have, they have, you (all) have. Of course , have is also used with the singular pronoun I , I have.
No. The verb or helper verb "has" is singular. Plural nouns (and I and you) use "have."
Have and has are verbs. Has in the singular form of have. They are both used with the past participle of verbs in perfect verb phrases.She has been to Shanghai. - singular subject sheThe doctor has visited Jack. - singular subject doctorWe have seen the movie. - plural subject weThe boys have come home. - plural subject boys
Pronoun-verb agreement requires a correct match between a pronoun and a verb based on number (singular or plural).A singular pronoun requires a verb for a singular subject.Example: She is expected at noon. (singular subject pronoun)A plural pronoun requires a verb for a plural subject.Example: They are expected at noon. (plural subject pronoun)
Verbs cannot be singular or plural. Requires is after singular nouns.