Writing Instruction Tutorial

Grammar

Subject-Verb Agreement

Subjects and verbs must agree in person and number. The rule is basically simple: a singular subject requires a singular verb form, and a plural subject requires a plural verb form. The difficulty is to determine whether the subject is singular or plural; whether is it first, second, or third person; and whether the proper verb form is matched with the subject.

The Function of Person

Person is distinguished according to:

  • Who is speaking (first person)
  • Who is spoken to (second person)
  • Who or what is spoken about (third person)

For each category above, singular and plural for person are distinguished.

SingularPlural
First personIwe
Second personyouyou
Third personhe, she, it, tree, cat, picturethey, trees, cats, pictures

One problem occurs with pronouns, for pronouns must agree with their antecedents (the nouns for which they are substituting) in number, gender, and person.

Hence, if the antecedent is plural, the pronoun must be plural:

  • The cars were badly damaged in the accident. They had to be towed away.

If the antecedent is singular, the pronoun must be singular:

  • The young man was so handsome that he made the women in the audience gasp.

The following words are considered singular and require singular pronouns: anyone, everyone, everybody, anybody, many a, either.

  • When it started to rain, almost everyone in the stadium opened his umbrella.

The Function of a Noun

A word is a noun if it functions as a noun in a sentence. For example, the word hope may be used in several ways.

  • I hope we make it to the train on time. (verb)
  • She was thrilled with all she had accumulated for her hope chest. (adjective)
  • My one hope is that he will be a success in his chosen field. (noun)

When a word (or words) is used as a subject, it is considered a noun or noun form. The following four characteristics help to identify nouns:

  1. Nouns can be described by adjectives: the green and yellow parrot, the golden rule, the red truck, the great, white hope.
  2. Most nouns can be numbered, singular or plural: car, cars, tomato, tomatoes, nationality, nationalities.
  3. Nouns have gender. Some are masculine or feminine: man, woman; boy, girl; hero, heroine; aviator, aviatrix; actor, actress; rooster, hen. The vast majority of English nouns are neuter: house, song, beast, beauty. In some cases, we use the feminine gender for inanimate things: She's quite a ship. She's a grand old flag.
  4. Most nouns can show possession, and that which is possessed is also a noun: cat's mouse, dog's bone, prodigy's talent, children's toys, life's disappointments, Stevens' students.

Singular and Plural Forms of Nouns

The problem of number for nouns: singular and plural. Most nouns can be made singular or plural. Some, however, are only singular and others only plural. Below are various methods or noun rules by which nouns are made plural with examples.

  1. Most nouns, including proper nouns, add s. Proper nouns are specific names, for example, George Smith, JFK High School, Park Avenue.

    NounsProper Nouns
    frogfrogsSmithSmiths
    bananabananasCharleyCharleys
    attorneyattorneysWileyWileys
    toetoesCohenCohens
    chiefchiefs
  2. Some nouns add es.

    Nouns that end with sh, ch, s, or x add es:

    boxboxes
    bushbushes
    brushbrushes
    churchchurches
    gasgases
    glassglasses

    Some nouns ending with a consonant followed by an o, add es:

    embargoembargoes
    potatopotatoes
    tomatotomatoes
    vetovetoes
    volcanovolcanoes
  3. Some nouns change their final f or fe to ves:

    calfcalves
    elfelves
    halfhalves
    knifeknives
    leafleaves
    loafloaves
    thiefthieves
    wifewives
  4. Some nouns change internal vowels:

    footfeet
    goosegeese
    louselice
    manmen
    mousemice
    toothteeth
    womanwomen
  5. Nouns that end in ey (the vowel y) add s to form plurals:

    gulleygulleys
    valleyvalleys
    moneymoneys
  6. Nouns that end in a consonant plus y, drop the y and add ies:

    allyallies
    babybabies
    boundaryboundaries
    citycities
    enemyenemies
    flyflies
    ladyladies
    secretarysecretaries
    skyskies
    varietyvarieties
  7. Proper nouns ending in y add only an s. Most other proper nouns add only an s or es, so that the basic spelling of the names is not changed.

    BurkeBurkes
    BushBushes
    DiFrancoDiFrancos
    DillyDillys
    JamesJameses
    JonesJoneses
    KlatchKlatches
  8. Some nouns are identical in the singular and in the plural. It is usually necessary to use numerals to tell the reader whether they are singular or plural. For example: He saw one Japanese. He saw ten Japanese.

    ChineseChinese
    deerdeer
    moosemoose
    scissorsscissors
    sheepsheep
    trouserstrousers
  9. Some nouns are used only as plurals:

    acousticsathleticscattle
    goodsheadquarterspremises
    tacticsproceedsriches
  10. Some nouns are used only as singulars:

    economicsethicsmeasles
    mumpsmolassesnews
    physics
  11. Collective nouns may be considered singular or plural depending on their use in the sentence.

    audienceboardclass
    clubcrewcrowd
    facultyfamilyfraternity
    groupmajorityminority
    tribetroop
  12. Pronouns, words used instead of nouns, may also be singular or plural. They must agree in number with the noun they are replacing and also with their verb.