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No. Each adjective takes its own (different) preposition. When you switch to the verbals, you have new problems. They don't work in parallel. You have respect for X. You can devote the next four hours to homework. You can devote yourself to
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I have never seen 'police' used with a singular verb. I am a mud as far as English is concerned. My understanding is, " police" is one of those words considered correct in both plural or singula r, depending on the writer's
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I think it's because the verb agrees with "all I wanted", and for some reason that needs a singular verb. However, sometimes you might find that someone also uses a plural verb if a plural noun follows: All I needed was/were two
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I don't like the use of it in your first sentence. I would say: I bet after a few visits you'll find those kind of places boring. Kind is an irregular plural in that expression according to many authoritative grammarians such as Otto
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If you're going to use the plural verb, I'd repeat the article: "a book and a workbook." "Book and workbook" are often considered a unit, and (as they say) if you think of them in that way, you may use the singular verb.
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Is this sentence grammaticaly correct?
Your problems are the least of my concern. Yes. It's correct. But here you have least used with a singular noun ( concern ), not a plural, so I don't see the point of your prefatory remarks,
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I would say that 'more than one' requires a singular noun so the third sentence is incorrect (in my view).
In the first sentence 'more than one subject' is the subject of the sentence (in singular) so it should be correct.
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After neither of+noun/pronoun ,we use a singular verb in a formal style. - Neither of my sisters is married. In an informal style,you can use a plural verb. - Neither of my sisters are married. And your question:Neither can be used alone without
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I'm saying that in this sentence the uncountable noun "jest" is singular, and therefore calls for a singular verb, "is." It's like saying, "Your foolishness is wearing me down." Many nouns have both a
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Sometimes it helps to convert a question to a declarative sentence, as you try to figure out the tense of the verb. Ask yourself what the subject of the clause is. Are there more than one? Is the subject singular or plural? The tree is what
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
32 days ago
Verbs, Singular Verbs, Plurals, Prepositions, Tenses, Clauses, Writing, Sentences, Plants, Colours, Singular
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