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College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

© Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

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Page 1: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

GRAMMAR:

Subject Verb Agreement

Page 2: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

To determine the subject of a sentence, first separate the verb and then make a question by

placing "who?" or "what?" before it -- the answer is the subject.

Find the subject in each sentence. The audience littered the theatre floor.

The boy eats tacos.

The marching band won the competition.

The man with the mustache drives a BMW.

Page 3: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

A singular subject demands a singular verb; a plural subject demands

a plural verb. But is it that simple? pg. 141 A- even number problems

Page 4: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

In present tenses, nouns and verbs form plurals in opposite ways:

       nouns ADD an s to the singular form, BUT     verbs REMOVE an s from the singular form.

               

Page 5: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement
Page 6: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

PLURAL Indefinite pronounsPlural indefinite pronoun subjects take plural verbs.

several, few, both, many

               

Page 7: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

Some indefinite pronouns may be either singular or plural:    some, any, none, all, most

with uncountable, use singular; with countable, use plural.

   Sugar is uncountable; therefore, the sentence has a singular verb.

Marbles are countable; therefore, the sentence has a plural verb.

Page 8: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

CHECK YOURSELF:Most of the socks ________ missing from the drier.

are? is?

CHECK YOURSELF:All of the sand ________ in my car.

are? is?

Page 9: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

Compound subjects joined by and

are always plural.

With compound subjects joined by or/nor,

the verb agrees with the subject nearer to it.

In the above example, the plural verb are agrees with the nearer subject actors.

Page 10: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

In this example, the singular verb is agrees with the nearer subject director.

CHECK YOURSELF:Neither the books nor the backpack ________ in sight.

are? is?

Page 11: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

Titles of single entities (books, organizations, countries, etc.) are always singular.

                                                                                                    

CHECK YOURSELF:Lord of the Flies ________ the best book I’ve ever read!

are? is? The United Arab Emirates________ in the Middle East.

are? is?

Page 12: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement
Page 13: © Capital Community College GRAMMAR: Subject Verb Agreement

Grammar Books

Pg. 111 Exercise 2 only #1-10

Pg. 141 A- ODD numbered problems

Did you learn?