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The Everyday Writer Andrea A. Lunsford.  To make a verb in the present tense agree with a third-person singular subject, add –s or –es to the base form.

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Presentation on theme: "The Everyday Writer Andrea A. Lunsford.  To make a verb in the present tense agree with a third-person singular subject, add –s or –es to the base form."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Everyday Writer Andrea A. Lunsford

2  To make a verb in the present tense agree with a third-person singular subject, add –s or –es to the base form. A vegetarian diet lowers the risk of heart disease. What you eat affects your health.

3  To make a verb in the present tense agree with any other subject, use the base form of the verb. I miss my family. They live in another state.

4  Have and be do not follow the –s or –es pattern. Have changes to has; be has irregular forms in both present and past tenses. War is hell. The soldier was brave beyond the call of duty.

5  Make sure the verb agrees with the subject and not with another noun that falls in between. Many books on the best-seller list has little literary value A vase of flowers makes a room attractive. have

6 A passenger, as well as the driver, were injured in the accident. was

7  Subjects joined by and generally require a plural verb form. A backpack, a canteen, and a rifle was issued to each recruit. were George W. Bush’s older brother and political ally was the governor of Florida. Drinking and driving remain a major cause of highway accidents and fatalities. remains

8  If the word each or every precedes subjects joined by and, the verb form is singular. Each boy and girl chooses one gift to take home.

9  With subjects joined by or or nor, the verb agrees with the part closer or closest to the verb. Either the witnesses or the defendant is lying.

10  Nouns like family, team, audience, group, jury, crowd, band, class, and committee refer to a group and can take either singular or plural verbs depending on whether they refer to the group as a single unit or to the members. The jury still disagree on a number of counts. After deliberating, the jury reports its verdict.

11 Two-thirds of the students were commuters. Two-thirds of the park has burned. The number of applicants for the internship was amazing. Where are my reading glasses? A number of applicants were put on the waiting list.

12  Most take singular verb forms.  Both, few, many, others, and several are plural.  All, any, enough, more, most, none, and some can be singular or plural, depending on the noun they refer to. Of the two jobs, neither holds much appeal. Though many apply, few are chosen. All of the cake was eaten.

13  The verb should agree with the antecedent of the pronoun. Fear is an ingredient that goes into creating stereotypes. Guilt and fear are ingredients that go into creating stereotypes. Carla is one of the employees who always works overtime. work

14  Verb should agree with the subject NOT the complement. The three key treaties is the topic of my talk. are

15  Some words that end in –s appear plural but are singular. Measles still strike many Americans. strikes

16  Make the verb agree with the subject, not with a noun that happens to be before it.  In sentences beginning with there is or there are, there is NOT the subject. Beside the barn stands silos filled with grain. stand There are five basic positions in the classical ballet.

17 One Writer’s Beginnings describe Eudora Welty’s childhood. Steroids are a little word that packs a big punch in the world of sports. describes is


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