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ENTC 3030. AGREEMENT. Agreement Worksheet. Agreement is essentially a matching strategy: subjects and verbs express the same number; pronouns and their antecedents match in number and gender.
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ENTC 3030 AGREEMENT
Agreement Worksheet • Agreement is essentially a matching strategy: • subjects and verbs express the same number; • pronouns and their antecedents match in number and gender.
While this sounds simple enough, English has, as usual, enough strange forms to make the task challenging. • The key idea in all cases is to think about your meaning rather than merely following rules.
Subject/Verb Agreement • Discount inverted sentence structure and intervening phrases, prepositional and otherwise.
Most opposed to wolf reintroduction and let-it-burn forest fire policy is the ranching population. • The skull structure of the salamanders is intriguing. • There are long-term problems with radioactive waste disposal.
"And" usually creates plural subjects, but other additive phrases don't: • as well as, • accompanied by, • in addition to, • etc.
The aspen as well as other common trees doesn't grow well in cities. • The aspen and other common trees don't grow well here.
Note: When "and" joins two attributes of the same unit, the subject remains singular: • The chief researcher and lab technician is too busy to see you.
"Every" and "each" usually are singular. • Every student, teacher, and administrator has an interest in the university. • Each workstation and each computer has its own hook-up.
Paired conjunctions--either/or, neither/nor--that join singular subjects usually leave the subjects singular. • Either NSF or NIH is a good choice for funding. • Neither rain nor mist permeates drought-hardened ground. • Revision or destruction helps writing to improve.
If one subject is singular and one is plural, the one nearer the verb controls its number. • Neither the flasks nor the beaker was clean. • Neither the beaker nor the flasks were clean.
Words that focus on sorting out individuals— • each, • either, • neither, • one
or denoting a general case— • everyone, • everybody, • anyone
usually take singular verbs when they are subjects. • Each of them has sufficient training. • Everyone wants to do field work. • Neither likes to wash glassware.
Collective nouns are singular when they denote the group as a whole and plural when they denote the individuals in the group.
A number were able to finish the experiment in time. • A group of technicians is radioactively contaminated. • A majority is needed for this vote. • A majority of people are going to go. • Statistics are inconclusive, so they can be distorted. • Ironically, statistics is an imprecise subject.
Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement • Pronouns have the same number and gender as their antecedents; • the tricky part is determining the correct antecedent.
Many of the ideas noted before apply to pronoun relationships too: • Each of the laboratories is accountable for its work. • Everybody has the right to wear protective masks when they work with noxious chemicals. • Neither the rat nor the mice show signs of stress in their brain-wave responses. • Neither the mice nor the rat shows signs of stress in its brain-wave responses.
Relative pronouns too have the same number as their antecedents.
Tigers which are becoming extinct in some areas of India are endangered by vegetation destruction rather than hunting. • It is the wildcats that are often blamed for attacks perpetrated by other animals. • The one-and-only-one rule states that if all of a group are acting, plural is used, but if only one acts, the singular is used.
He is one of the scientists who are radioactive. • He is the only one of the scientists who is radioactive. • This procedure is the only one that is repeatable.
Homework: Choose the right answer and explain! • The equipment and the glassware showed (its, their) age. • Either the crystals or the powder must have lost (its, their) potency. • Neither the technicians nor the lab assistant (was, were) willing to change (his, their) attitude.
The board of editors (make, makes) (its, their) report. • My estimates of significance (differ, differs) from yours. • The administrator and scientist (is, are) developing a new plan. • Blue and red (is, are) useful in staining specimens.
She is the only one of all the scientists who (lack, lacks) training. • Every one of the figures (was, were) checked twice. • Good planning plus favorable funding conditions (was, were) responsible for the improvement.
The inventory (was, were) flasks of several sizes. • Each of these specimens had (its, their) limbs dissected. • The group of researchers (does, do) not agree on methods, but (it, they) (unites, unite) on issues.