20 Rules About Subject-Verb Agreement Is, or are? Go, or goes? - TopicsExpress



          

20 Rules About Subject-Verb Agreement Is, or are? Go, or goes? Whether a verb issingular or plural depends on any one of a complicated set of factors. Here is a roster of rules for subject-verb agreement (or “Here are some rules . ..”): 1. Use verbs that agree with a subject, not with a noun that is part of a modifying phrase or clause between verb and subject: “The pot of eggs is boiling on the stove.” 2. Use singular or plural verbs that agreewith the subject, not with the complement of the subject: “My favorite type of movie is comedies,” but “Comedies are my favourite type of movie.” 3. Use singular verbs with singular indefinite pronouns — each, the “-bodies,” “-ones,” and “-things” (anybody,everyone,nothing), and the like: “Neither is correct.” (And, just as in rule number 1, the presence of a modifier is irrelevant: “Neither of them is correct.”) 4. Use plural verbs with plural indefinite pronouns: “Many outcomes are possible.” 5. Use singular verbs with uncountable nouns that follow an indefinite pronoun: “All the paint is dried up.” 6. Use plural verbs with countable nounsthat follow an indefinite pronoun: “All the nails are spilled on the floor.” 7. Use plural verbs with compound subjects that include and: “The dog and the cat are outside.” 8. Use plural verbs or singular verbs, depending on the form of the noun nearest the verb, with compound subjects that includenororor: “Either the dog or the catsareresponsiblefor the mess.” (“Either the cats or the dogisresponsible for the mess” is also technically correct but is awkward.) 9. Use singular verbs with inverted subjects that include singular nouns: “Whyismy hat outside in the rain?” 10. Use plural verbs with inverted subjects (those beginning with the expletivethererather than the actualsubject) that include plural nouns: “Thereareseveral hats outside in the rain.” 11. Use singular or plural verbs with collective nouns depending on meaning: “His staffisassembled,” but “Staffareasked to go to the conference room immediately.” (In the first sentence, the emphasis is on the body of employees; in the second sentence, the focus is on compliance by each individual in the body of employees.) 12. Use singular verbs for designations of entities, such as nations or organizations, or compositions, such as books or films: “The United Nationsisheadquarteredin New York.” 13. Use singular verbs for subjects pluralin form but singular in meaning: “Physicsismy favorite subject.” 14. Use singular or plural verbs for subjects plural in form but plural or singular in meaning depending on the context: “The economics of the situationarecomplicated,” but “Economicsisa complicated topic.” 15. Use plural verbs for subjects pluralin form and meaning: “The tweezersarein the cupboard.” 16. Use plural verbs in constructions of the form “one of those (blank) who . . .”: “I am one of those eccentrics whodonot tweet.” 17. Use singular verbs in constructions of the form “the only one of those (blank) who . . .”: “I am the only one of my friends whodoesnot tweet.” 18. Use singular verbs in constructions of the form “the number of (blank) . . .”: “The number of people herebogglesthe mind.” 19. Use plural verbs in constructions of the form “a number of (blank) . . .”: “A number of people heredisagree.” 20. Use singular verbs in constructionof the forms “every (blank) . . .” and “many a (blank) . . .”: “Every good boy doesfine”; “Many a trueword is spoken in jest.”
Posted on: Sun, 18 Aug 2013 17:05:22 +0000

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