Subject vERB AGREEMENT
Subject vERB AGREEMENT
must match the number, person, and gender of the subject; in English, the verb
needs to match just the number and sometimes the person. For example, the
singular subject it and the plural subject they use different versions of the same verb:
“it goes . . . ” and “they go . . . ”
Learning the rules for subject-verb agreement can be difficult at first, but with enough
practice, you’ll find they start to make more sense. Below, we explain everything you
need to tackle any subject-verb agreement exercises you come across, including
demonstrations of how they work with lots of subject-verb agreement examples.
Give your writing extra polish
What is subject-verb agreement?
Subject-verb agreement, also called “subject-verb concord,” refers to matching the
subject and verb of a sentence in tense, aspect, and mood (abbreviated as TAM),
which translates to number, person, and gender.
English doesn’t use grammatical gender (except for pronouns), and only the verb be
changes based on whether it’s first, second, or third person. That means most
English subject-verb agreement is about quantity: if the subject is singular, the verb
must be singular; if the subject is plural, the verb must be plural.
Even this can get confusing, though, because talking in the first-person singular (“I
climb the fence”) uses the same verb format as talking in the first-person plural (“We
climb the fence”). Aside from the verb be, subject-verb agreement in English adapts
verbs to the third-person singular (“It climbs the fence”).
Usage and subject-verb agreement examples
Basically, most subjects except third-person singular use the standard form of a verb
in the present tense.
The dogs roll in the mud.
I need to catch my breath.
You look like a celebrity!
However, if the subject is third-person singular, you must use the singular form of the
verb when speaking in the present tense. Most of the time, this means adding an -s
to the end of the verb.
The dog rolls in the mud.
She needs to catch her breath.
He looks like a celebrity!
If the verb ends in -x, –ss, –sh, –ch, –tch, or –zz, you add –es to the end to match
the third-person singular.