Rules For Subject
Rules For Subject
Rules For Subject
RULE 1 – A verb agrees with its subject in number. Singular subjects take
singular verbs, same as plural subjects take plural verbs.
RULE 2 – The number of the subject (singular or plural) is not changed by words
that come between the subject and the verb
RULE 3 – Some subjects always take a singular verb even though the meaning
may seem plural.
RULE 4 – The following words may be singular or plural, depending upon their
use in a sentence, some, any, all, most.
RULE 5 – Subjects joined by and are plural. Subjects joined by or or Nor take a
verb that agrees with the last subject.
RULE 6 – There and here are never subjects. In sentences that begin with these
words, the subject is usually found later on in the sentence.
There were five books on the shelf. (were, agrees with the subject book)
Here is the report you wanted. (Is agrees with subject report)
RULE 7 – Collective nouns may be singular or plural, depending on their use in
the sentence.
A collective noun is a noun used to name a whole group. Following are some common
examples:
Army, crowd, orchestra, audience , flock, public, class, group, swarm, club,
herd , team, committee, jury, troop, United States
RULE 9 – Some nouns, while plural in form, are actually singular in meaning.
RULE 10 – Don’t and Doesn’t must agree with the subject. Use doesn’t after he,
she, it.