The Grammar Business Part Three 5. Subject Verb Agreement The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College The form of the verb • may change depending on the subject 2 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College So if the verb is SEE and the subject is SHE 3 • She sees him. The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College But if the verb is SEE and the subject is THEY • They see him. 4 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College And if the verb is SEE and the subject is SHE 5 • She has seen him. The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College But if the verb is • They have seen him. SEE and the subject is THEY 6 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College Some subjects are • singular (only one) • She is seeing him. • Others are plural (more than one) • They are seeing him. 7 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College A common error is • to get subject-verb agreement wrong • small children often do this 8 • My mummy and daddy is very cross. • I lives in a big, big house. • They hasn’t got as much money as me The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College In some cases big people get it wrong too • For example, what’s wrong with 9 “I have three friends and each of them are completely trustworthy.” The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College The answer is • ‘Each’ is singular - it means literally ‘each one’ and so the sentence should read 10 “I have three friends and each of them is completely trustworthy.” The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College And what about • Using ‘both’ “I have two friends and both of them is completely trustworthy.” 11 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College Yes, that was wrong! • ‘Both’ is plural, so the sentence should read 12 “I have two friends and both of them are completely trustworthy.” The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College The word Neither can cause similar problems • Neither means ‘neither one’ - so it’s singular • And the following sentence is correct 13 Neither of them is very happy. The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College A difficulty is also caused by • Group nouns like 14 • • • • • • • The Government The Labour Party The group The army The team The family The orchestra The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College Group nouns • can be regarded as either singular or plural • both of the following are correct • [or either one of them is correct] 15 • The Government has announced a new tax on students. • The Government have announced a new tax on students. The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College When using group nouns • It is important to be consistent • If you decide the Government is plural, stick to that idea and refer to ‘their’ decisions • If you decide the Government is singular, refer to ‘its’ decisions 16 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College Pair nouns are different • A pair noun is a noun for one thing made of two parts which are the same • For example: jeans, scissors, glasses, binoculars • A pair noun is plural 17 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College So you say • My jeans are dirty their knees are quite black • My jeans is dirty their knees are quite black • My scissors are missing • and NOT • My scissors is missing 18 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College And you need to be careful with • people • police • cattle 19 People, police and cattle are all nouns with a plural meaning and they need a plural verb The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College And so you have to say • The police have arrested one woman and they will question her later. • The cattle are lowing and their feet are very painful. • People have flocked to the country in hordes, bringing their families with them. 20 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College Try a self-testing exercise to check your confidence on this • You’ll find one on Handout Four. 21 The Grammar Business © 2001 Glenrothes College