1 / 19

Subject/Verb Agreement

Subject/Verb Agreement. Subject – Verb Agreement. The subject and verb must match in number Singular subjects have singular verbs Plural subjects have plural verbs. Singular Subjects and Verbs. When a subject refers to only one person or thing, it is singular

jamil
Download Presentation

Subject/Verb Agreement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Subject/Verb Agreement

  2. Subject – Verb Agreement • The subject and verb must match in number • Singular subjects have singular verbs • Plural subjects have plural verbs

  3. Singular Subjects and Verbs • When a subject refers to only one person or thing, it is singular • Singular verbs must have an S on the end • He lives in Ocala. • Ms. Urban loves Johnny Depp. • Tinkerbelllicks Roxy’s ears.

  4. Plural Subjects and Verbs • When a subject refers to more than one person or thing, it is plural • Plural verbs do not have an S on the end • Johnny Depp and Ms. Urban love each other. • Tinkerbell and Roxy play in the yard. • The players want to rest.

  5. Check for Understanding The baby sleep/sleeps more than ten hours a day. • Sleep or sleeps? • Sleep is the plural verb, and sleeps is the singular verb • The baby sleepsmore than ten hours a day. What if we said babies? • The babies sleep more than ten hours a day.

  6. Quiz Yourself • The sealed boxes belong/belongs to Jenna. • The children gives/give the teacher a snack. • Many students think/thinks class is hard. • Harry give/gives Sally lunch everyday. • The puppies play/plays all night. • Many women pay/pays to color their hair. • My boss is/are nice. Answers: belong give think gives play Pay is

  7. Quiz Yourself • The football team is/are good this year. • She was/were sad yesterday. • Jenna steal/steals my clothes. • Teri was/were speeding when she got her ticket. • The teachers talk/talks to each other. Answers: The football team is good this year. She was sad yesterday. Jenna steals my clothes. Teri was speeding when she got her ticket. The teachers talk to each other.

  8. Compound Subject • Compound subject – more than one subject • When the subjects are joined by and, you want to use a plural verb. • Johnny Depp and Ms. Urban like movies. • The boy and girl watchtv.

  9. Compound Subject • When joined by orornor, make the verb agree with the subject closest to it • Either Jake or Jenna has my keys. • Jackie or Karl is going to come. • Neither rain nor clouds are going to ruin my day.

  10. Collective Nouns • Name a group of people or things • Team, band, class, committee, crew, crowd, family, senate, troop • Use a singular verb when they act as a single unit. • The team is excited for the game. • The crew is mutinying against the captain. • The orchestra sounds lovely tonight.

  11. Collective Nouns • Use a plural verb when referring to individual actions or feelings • The team get their new uniforms today. • The crew buy their new fishing poles from the store. • The family are walking, running, and biking to the game.

  12. Things to Watch • Sometimes, a subject and verb are separated by a prepositional phrase • Starts with a preposition and ends with an object (noun or pronoun) • A small bag of potato chips contain/contains 440 calories. • So what do we do?

  13. Things to Watch • Cross out the prepositional phrase! • A small bag of potato chips contain/contains 440 calories. • The tomatoes in this salad gives/give me vitamins. Answers: contains give

  14. Things to Watch • The dogs in the crate cry/cries all night. • The dogs in the crate cry all night. • Many people from Wisconsin has/have accents. • Many people from Wisconsin have accents.

  15. Things to Watch • Many cultures from different countries try/tries to maintain their customs. • Many cultures from different countriestry to maintain their customs. • The cause of thunder is/are studied by scientists. • The cause of thunderis studied by scientists.

  16. Always Singular Pronouns • One • Anyone • Everyone • No one • Someone • Anybody • Everybody • Nobody • Somebody • Each

  17. Always Plural Pronouns • Both • Few • Many • Several

  18. Exceptions • Some, any, all, none, and most are exceptions to ignoring prepositional phrases • We need the prepositional phrase to let us know if the pronoun is singular or plural • Some of the pie is gone. • Some of the cookies are gone.

  19. Quiz Yourself on Exceptions • Is/Are any of the paper still in the supply cabinet? • Are/is any of the pencils still in the supply cabinet? • All of her work has/have been published. • All of her poems has/have been published. Answers: Is any of the paper…. Are any of the pencils… All of her work has been published. All of her poems have been published.

More Related