Subject-Verb Agreement

When writing and speaking in present tenses, the subjects and verbs in a sentence need to be in the same form, or, “agree” with each other, and that’s called subject-verb agreement (SVA). Subjects and verbs have single and plural forms, and it’s important not to mix them up. All sentences need a subject and a verb to be complete, but if they don’t match, the sentence won’t make sense!

2. Examples of Subject-Verb Agreement

Overall, subject-verb agreement is a very simple idea. For subjects and verbs to agree, the numbers need to agree.

For instance, if a person is riding a bike, you need to express that one person rides one bike. So, to write in singular, you need to add “s” to the base form of the verb:

Now, if Sally and Sam, or “friends,” are riding bikes, there are two or more nouns, so we use the plural form. For plural, you just use the base form of the verb (ride):

3. Rules of Subject-Verb Agreement

Present tense nouns and verbs have singular and plural forms. There are some special cases, for instance, pronouns (like I and you) have their own rules. Also, as you probably already know, the verb “to be” is special, and also has some of its own rules.

a. Singulars

Singular subjects need singular verbs.

Singular nouns do not have an “s”, but singular verbs need an “s”

b. Plurals

Here are some examples:

Girl s walk to work.
Snail s move slowly.
Cat s like sleeping.
Sister s help others.

This chart can help you remember common subject-verb combinations for singulars and plurals.

Noun Other Verb
Sally (She)loves
Sally and Sam (They)love
The snail (It)loves
The snails (They)love

c. Special Case: Personal Pronouns

Most words follow the normal subject-verb agreement rules—except some personal pronouns. Even though I and you are singular, they require a plural verb.

Pronoun Verb
Ilove
Youlove
Welove
Theylove
He/Sheloves

d. Special Case: the verb “to be”

As you know, the verb “to be” is special. This chart will remind you of its proper forms:

Pronoun/Noun Present “to be” Past “to be”
The snail (it)iswas
The snails (they)arewere
Iamwas
Youarewere
Wearewere
Theyarewere
He/Sheiswas

4. Types of Subject-Verb Agreement Situations

There are many types of situations where subject-verb agreement follows specific rules. Below are eight of the most common.

a. Compound subjects (two or more nouns joined by “and”) are always plural:

b. A compound subject made of two singular subjects joined together by “or” and “nor” (usually combine with either/neither) need singular verbs:

To check for mistakes, you can leave out the first half of the subject, and the subject and verb will still agree:

c. When plural or mixed plural/singular subjects are in a neither/nor or either/or situations, the verb agrees with the noun or pronoun closest to it:

Again, you can check this by cutting out the other half of the subject:

d. The word “of” often causes confusion about subject-verb agreement. When you have A of B, (a box of cookies, a collection of books, groups of people, swarms of bees) the verb matches A .

A is the true subject, even though it contains B. To check to see if a subject and verb agrees in this situation, you can remove the “of B”, and it should sound correct:

e. Phrases or clauses ( purple ) between subjects and verbs DO NOT change the tense of the verb. It still needs to agree with the main noun of the subject:

To double-check this grammar situation, you can remove the phrase, and the sentence should still work:

f. The word doesn’t (does not) can only be used with a singular subject, and the word don’t (do not) can only be used with plural subjects:

g. Collective nouns (groups of people) are considered singular, so they use singular verbs. But, if you break these groups down into members, THEN you need a singular verb:

h. These special words are all singular and need singular verbs, even though some of them seem like plurals: each, each one, either, neither, everyone, everybody, anybody, anyone, nobody, somebody, someone.

There is an exception here, for the word “each.” If “each” follows a plural noun, then it needs a plural verb, but alone “each” is singular:

5. How to Avoid Mistakes

The basic idea being subject-verb agreement is easy: singulars + singulars, plurals + plurals. Still, people mix them up all the time. Here are some key rules to remember when you are checking your own subject-verb agreement:

Let’s review with a couple more simple examples:

Here’s one last easy tip to help tell if subjects and verbs agree: Simply read the sentence out loud to yourself! When subjects and verbs disagree, it almost always sounds really awkward.