The document discusses subject-verb agreement in sentences using common pronouns and auxiliary verbs. It provides examples of sentences with first, second and third person pronouns followed by the verb "like" and the direct object "coffee" to illustrate the rules that for singular subjects "he, she, it" the verb is conjugated as "likes" while for plural subjects "I, you, we, they" the verb is conjugated as "like". It also shows how questions are formed by placing the auxiliary verb "Do" before singular subjects or "Does" before third person singular subjects.
The document discusses subject-verb agreement in sentences using common pronouns and auxiliary verbs. It provides examples of sentences with first, second and third person pronouns followed by the verb "like" and the direct object "coffee" to illustrate the rules that for singular subjects "he, she, it" the verb is conjugated as "likes" while for plural subjects "I, you, we, they" the verb is conjugated as "like". It also shows how questions are formed by placing the auxiliary verb "Do" before singular subjects or "Does" before third person singular subjects.
The document discusses subject-verb agreement in sentences using common pronouns and auxiliary verbs. It provides examples of sentences with first, second and third person pronouns followed by the verb "like" and the direct object "coffee" to illustrate the rules that for singular subjects "he, she, it" the verb is conjugated as "likes" while for plural subjects "I, you, we, they" the verb is conjugated as "like". It also shows how questions are formed by placing the auxiliary verb "Do" before singular subjects or "Does" before third person singular subjects.
The document discusses subject-verb agreement in sentences using common pronouns and auxiliary verbs. It provides examples of sentences with first, second and third person pronouns followed by the verb "like" and the direct object "coffee" to illustrate the rules that for singular subjects "he, she, it" the verb is conjugated as "likes" while for plural subjects "I, you, we, they" the verb is conjugated as "like". It also shows how questions are formed by placing the auxiliary verb "Do" before singular subjects or "Does" before third person singular subjects.