Subject-verb agreement refers to the grammatical concept that the subject of a sentence must align with the main verb of that same sentence.
This is the head noun and the verb must agree with it. It will not always be the noun or pronoun directly in front of the verb.
Singular verbs are formed by adding -s or -es to the base form of the verb. For example, leaves and stays are singular verbs.
A singular subject must have a singular verb.
Plural subjects must have plural verbs.
Two subjects joined by ‘and’ will always take a plural verb.
If two subjects express one idea, use a singular verb.
Two singular subjects joined by ‘or’ or ‘nor’ will take a singular verb.
A singular subject and a plural subject joined by ‘or’, ‘either-or’, ‘neither- nor’, ‘none but’, or ‘not only but also’; will take a singular or plural verb depending on which subject is near the verb:
If two subjects are joined together by ‘as well as, ‘with’, ‘along with, ‘together with, ‘besides’, ‘in addition to, ‘and not’, ‘rather than, the verb will act according to the main subject:
Indefinite pronouns such as someone, somebody, nobody, one, no one, everyone, everybody, either, neither, etc. always take a singular verb.
Indefinite plural pronouns (several, all, few, both, and many) always take plural verbs:
The title of the book needs singular verbs:
The subject ‘Many a’ …… is always followed by the singular verb.
If the subject is ‘the number of’..…use a singular verb.
If the subject begins with ‘A number of’, (A large number of, A Great number of, many) use a plural verb:
Some nouns in the plural form represent an amount, a fraction, or an element of time (sum, distance, quantity, and time period) and are considered singular and hence take singular verbs.
Choose the correct form of the verb that agrees with the subject.
Example 1: Annie and her brothers (is, are) at school.
Ans: Annie and her brothers are at school.
Example 2: Either my mother or my father (is, are) coming to the meeting.
Ans: Either my mother or my father is coming to the meeting.
Some indefinite pronouns are considered singular and require singular verb forms.
The following is the list of indefinite pronouns: anyone, anybody, anything, No one, nobody, nothing, someone, somebody, something, everyone, everybody, everything, whatever and whoever.
Example: Everyone wants to watch a movie. (Notice the singular verb 'wants' in this case).
A sentence that uses 'want' in the plural form is: Ram and Sham want to the movie.
Five indefinite pronouns can be either singular or plural, depending on the usage.
Which are these pronouns? These are the SANAM pronouns: Some, Any, None, All, More / Most. You can use this handy mnemonic, SANAM, to keep this in mind.
Now, the important thing is the basis on which we decide whether the noun is singular or plural. There is one simple rule that is followed here:
Let's take up some example sentences to understand how this works.
Examples using Countable Nouns:
Sentence 1: Some of the girls are going out.
Sentence 2: Most of the glasses were broken.
We can see in both these cases that the nouns are plural in nature (girls and glasses), and therefore, the verb is plural in nature (are and were). Now, let's take up the example of uncountable nouns.
Examples using Uncountable Nouns:
Sentence 1: Some water is needed.
Sentence 2: Most of the money was lost.
In this case, we can see that water and money are uncountable nouns (these cannot be counted, and the plural form does not exist for these words). Considering this, the verbs are singular in nature.
After many/a great many/a good many, etc., the noun is always plural, which is followed by a plural verb.
Example: A great many girls are following fashion trends these days. (Here, the plural noun 'girls' is followed by the plural verb are.)
After 'a number of/a large number', the noun and verb in the sentence are always plural.
Example: A number of soldiers have lost their lives on the border. (Here, the noun 'soldiers' is used in the plural form, and the verb 'have lost' is also plural in nature.)
A good number of students __________ studying for the exam.
After 'the number', the noun is plural, but the verb is singular.
Example: The number of soldiers at the border is large.
This time, even though the noun soldiers is plural, the verb in the sentence, 'is', is singular in nature. The reason for this is that we are referring to a singular number in this case.
Collective nouns may take either a singular or a plural verb, depending on their use in the sentence.
If collective nouns are acting as a unit, use a singular verb. If the sentence implies that the individual members are taking up different actions, we use a plural verb.
Before we understand this rule, let's understand what collective nouns are. A collective noun is the name we give to a group of nouns to refer to them as one entity. Some examples of collective nouns are:
Sentence 1: The committee is discussing the issue of safety in the neighbourhood.
Sentence 2: The committee are disagreeing on the issue of installing street lamps.
We can see from the above examples that even though we have used the same collective noun, we end up using a different verb. The reason for this is very simple. In the first sentence, the collective action of the collective noun is the same; there is no division among the members of the collective noun. In the second case, this is not so. There is an agreement, and the members of the collective noun have different actions.
Collective nouns like family, community and majority take a singular verb if their focus is on the whole entity. However, they take a plural verb if the focus is on individual members of the entity.
- Some words appear to be plural but are actually singular, so they take a singular verb (e.g. politics, athletics, news).
- You cannot make plurals out of some commonly used academic words (e.g. evidence, information).
Some words, such as news, measles, mumps, physics, etc. are extremely deceptive. They end in -s and appear to be plural but are really singular and require singular verbs.
Examples:
The verb in the subjunctive mood always takes the plural verb, even if the subject is singular in nature.
The plural verb 'were' replaces 'was' in sentences that express an unfulfilled wish, desire or condition. These sentences are built using if, as if, as though, I wish, etc.
The obvious question in your mind should be: What is the subjunctive mood of the verb? The subjunctive mood of the verb expresses an unfulfilled wish, desire, or condition. Generally, these sentences are built using if, as if, as though, I wish, etc. Let's take up some sentence examples to understand this rule:
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1. What is subject-verb agreement? |
2. What are the basic rules to follow for subject-verb agreement? |
3. Why is subject-verb agreement important in writing? |
4. How can subject-verb agreement errors affect the meaning of a sentence? |
5. What are some common examples of subject-verb agreement errors to watch out for? |
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