16.9: Subject-Verb Agreement
- Identify and use verbs to match the subject of a sentence
Tense Agreement
The basic idea behind sentence agreement is pretty simple: all the parts of your sentence should match (or agree ). Verbs need to agree with their subjects in number (singular or plural) and in person (first, second, or third). In order to check agreement, you simply need to find the verb and ask who or what is doing the action of that verb. For example:
- I really am (first-person singular) vs. We really are (first-person plural)
- The boy sings (third-person singular) vs. The boys sing (third-person plural)
Compound subjects are plural, and their verbs should agree. Look at the following sentence for an example:
A pencil, a backpack, and a notebook were issued to each student.
Verbs will never agree with nouns that are in phrases. To make verbs agree with their subjects, follow this example:
The direction of the three plays is the focus of my talk.
The subject of “my talk” is the direction, not plays , so the verb should be singular.
In the English language, verbs usually come after subjects. But when this order is reversed, the writer must make the verb agree with the subject, not with a noun that happens to precede it. For example:
Beside the house stand sheds filled with tools.
The subject is sheds ; it is plural, so the verb must be stand .
[reveal-answer q=”813087″]Explain Answers[/reveal-answer]
[hidden-answer a=”813087″]
-
Ann
walks
very slowly.
- Ann is a singular, third-person subject.
-
You
are
dating Tom?
- You is a singular, second-person subject.
-
Donna and April
get
along well.
- Donna and April is a plural, third-person subject.
-
Chris and Ben
are
the best duo this company has ever seen.
-
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Work through these slides to learn a few tips that will help you always get correct subject-verb agreement.
A link to an interactive elements can be found at the bottom of this page.
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Consistency
One of the most common grammatical mistakes in writing is a lack of tense consistency. Writers often start a sentence in one tense but ended up in another. Look back at that sentence. Do you see the error? The first verb start is in the present tense, but ended is in the past tense. The correct version of the sentence would be “Writers often start a sentence in one tense but end up in another.”
These mistakes often occur when writers change their minds halfway through writing the sentence, or when they come back and make changes but only end up changing half the sentence. It is very important to maintain a consistent tense, not just in a sentence but across paragraphs and pages. Decide if something happened, is happening, or will happen and then stick with that choice.
Read through the following paragraphs. Can you spot the errors in tense? Type your corrected passage in the text frame below:
If you want to pick up a new outdoor activity, hiking is a great option to consider. It’s a sport that is suited for a beginner or an expert—it just depended on the difficulty of hikes you choose. However, even the earliest beginners can complete difficult hikes if they pace themselves and were physically fit.
Not only is hiking an easy activity to pick up, it also will have some great payoffs. As you walked through canyons and climbed up mountains, you can see things that you wouldn’t otherwise. The views are breathtaking, and you will get a great opportunity to meditate on the world and your role in it. The summit of a mountain is unlike any other place in the world.
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[reveal-answer q=”792647″]Show Answer[/reveal-answer]
[hidden-answer a=”792647″]As we mentioned earlier, you want to make sure your whole passage is consistent in tense. You may have noticed that most of the verbs in this passage are in present tense; we’ve edited the passage be consistently in the present tense. All edited verbs are in bold:
If you want to pick up a new outdoor activity, hiking is a great option to consider. (1) It’s a sport that is suited for a beginner or an expert—it just depends on the difficulty of hikes you choose. However, even the earliest beginners can complete difficult hikes (2) if they pace themselves and are physically fit.
(3) Not only is hiking an easy activity to pick up, it also has some great payoffs. (4) As you walk through canyons and climb up mountains, you can see things that you wouldn’t otherwise. (5) The views are breathtaking, and you get a great opportunity to meditate on the world and your role in it. The summit of a mountain is unlike any other place in the world.
Here’s each original sentence, along with an explanation for the changes:
-
It’s a sport that is suited for a beginner or an expert—it just
depended
on the difficulty hikes you choose.
- depended should be the same tense as is ; it just depends on the difficulty
-
if they pace themselves and
were
physically fit.
- were should be the same tense as pace ; if they pace themselves and are physically fit.
-
Not only is hiking an easy activity to pick up, it also
will have
some great payoffs.
- will have should be the same tense as is ; it also has some great pay offs
-
As you
walked
through canyons and
climbed
up mountains
- walked and climbed are both past tense, but this doesn’t match the tense of the passage as a whole. They should both be changed to present tense: As you walk through canyons and climb up mountains.
-
The views are breathtaking, and you
will get
a great opportunity to meditate on the world and your role in it.
- will get should be the same tense as are ; you get a great opportunity
[/hidden-answer]
[reveal-answer q=”615298″]Explain Answers[/reveal-answer]
[hidden-answer a=”615298″]
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Check your understanding of subject-verb agreement in the following interactive.
Contributors and Attributions
- Text: Verb Tenses. Authored by : Lumen Learning. License : CC BY: Attribution
- Text: Verb Tense Consistency. Authored by : Lumen Learning. License : CC BY: Attribution
- Rhetoric and Composition/Parts of Speech. Provided by : Wikibooks. Located at : https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Rhetoric_and_Composition/Parts_of_Speech#Verbs . License : CC BY-SA: Attribution-ShareAlike
- Agreement (linguistics). Provided by : Wikipedia. Located at : https://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Agreement_(linguistics) . License : CC BY-SA: Attribution-ShareAlike
- Image of speech bubbles. Authored by : Gregor Cresnar. Provided by : The Noun Project. Located at : https://thenounproject.com/search/?q=agreed&i=441045 . License : CC BY: Attribution
- Verb Agreement Interactive. Authored by : Excelsior OWL. Located at : https://owl.excelsior.edu/grammar-essentials/parts-of-speech/verbs/verbs-try-it-out/ . License : CC BY: Attribution
- Subject-verb agreement refresher. Authored by : Excelsior OWL. Located at : https://owl.excelsior.edu/writing-refresher/grammar-refresher/subject-verb-agreement/ . License : CC BY: Attribution
- Hiker At The Mountain Top. Authored by : Jean Beaufort. Provided by : Public Domain Pictures. Located at : www.publicdomainpictures.net/view-image.php?image=171368&picture=hiker-at-the-mountain-top. License : Public Domain: No Known Copyright