a singular or plural verb, depending on the noun closest to the verb
The verb is singular if the two subjects separated by and refer to the same person or thing.Red beans and rice is my mom's favorite dish.
No it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to call (to shout, contact, phone or visit; or to match a bet). It can be a verb form, a participial, and more rarely an adjective (e.g. called bluff, called bet, called number).
Are is the present tense plural be verb. It is used with plural subjects egWe are sick. The dogs arenoisy. They are looking for trouble. You are making too much noise.
The word "exponent" is derived from the Latin verb "exponere", to "put out [more of something]".
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
A sentence with two or more subjects joined by a conjunction and that share the same verb is called a compound subject sentence. In this type of sentence, the subjects are connected by a conjunction such as "and" or "or" and the verb is used only once to describe the action of both subjects.
compound
The structure is likely a compound subject. This means that two or more subjects are connected by a conjunction and share the same verb in the sentence.
the girl and the dog leaped over the fence.
A compound subject eg A fool and his money are easily parted.
Are is present tense.Are is called a be verb. It is a plural be verb when used with plural pronouns or plural subjects egWe are from Hamilton.Or it can be singular, when used with "you". You are late.More is not a verb so it does not show tense.
A subject is a sentence with a noun in it. So you would have two nouns in that sentence. A verb is an action word. So a sentence with two subjects and one verb must include two nouns and one action word. for example: Sally and Ikicked a ball. Sally and the word I are the nouns. (a noun is a person,place,thing, or an idea)The verb of this sentence would be kicked. I think a sentence with two subjects and one verb is called a compound sentence. I hope this answered your question!
The two pronouns that are the same as a subject or the object of a verb or a preposition are you and it.Examples:You gave it a try.It gave you a rash.
Two or more verbs that share the same subject are called a