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What Is Subject Verb Agreement
What Is Subject Verb Agreement
Subject verb agreement refers to the fact that the subject and verb in a sentence must agree
in number. In other words, they both must be singular or they both must be plural. You can’t
have a singular subject with a plural verb or vice versa. The tricky part is in knowing the
singular and plural forms of subjects and verbs.
Singular and plural subjects, or nouns, are usually pretty easy. In most cases the plural form
of a noun has an “s” at the end. Like this:
Car – singular
Cars – plural
Verbs don’t follow this pattern, though. Adding an “s” to a verb doesn’t make a plural. Here’s
what I mean:
Walk
Walks
Which one is the singular form and which is the plural form? Here’s a tip for you. Ask yourself
which would you use with the word they and which would you use with he or she.
He walks.
She walks.
They walk.
Since he and she are singular pronouns walks is a singular verb. The word they is plural so
walk is the plural form.
1. When two singular subjects are joined by the words or or nor a singular verb is in order.
2. Two singular subjects joined by either/or or neither/nor also need a singular verb.
3. When the word and connects two or more nouns or pronouns, use a plural verb.
5. When a phrase comes between the subject and verb, the verb has to agree with the
subject, not with the noun or pronoun in the phrase.
The birthday boy, along with his friends, is anxious for the party to stop.
6. Since doesn’t is a contraction of does not it should be used with a singular subject.
7. Each, either, each one, everyone, neither, everybody, anyone, anybody, somebody,
nobody, someone, and no one are singular so they need a singular verb.
8. Sentences that begin with there is or there are have the subject following the verb since
there is not a subject. Therefore, the verb must agree with what follows it.
Subject verb agreement doesn’t have to riddle your writing with errors. Simply follow the
above rules and you’ll cut through a lot of the confusion that comes with getting your subject
and verb to agree.