The verbs must agree with their subjects in numbers and numbers and sometimes in sex. Articles and adjectives must correspond, in the case, the number and gender, to the underlyings they change. An example is the verb work, which is the following (the words are uttered in italics / t`a.vaj/): the adjectives correspond in terms of sex and number with the nouns they change in French. As with verbs, chords are sometimes displayed only in spelling, as forms written with different modes of concordance are sometimes pronounced in the same way (z.B pretty, pretty); Although, in many cases, the final consonan is pronounced in female forms, but mute in male forms (z.B. small vs. small). Most plural forms end in -s, but this consonant is pronounced only in contexts of connection, and these are determinants that help to understand whether it is the singular or the plural. In some cases, the entries of the verbs correspond to the subject or object. The very irregular verb is the only verb with more coherence than this one in the contemporary form. 12.
Use a singular verb with each and many of a singular verb. A rare type of arrangement that phonologically copies parts of the head instead of agreeing with a grammatical category. [4] For example, in Bainouk: Being able to find the right subject and verb will help you correct the errors of the subject-verb chord. However, almost all regular verbs have not been used in the past. So the auxiliary verb is used, z.B. you helped, not you helped. A grammatical person-based chord is most often between the verb and the subject. An example of English (I am against him) was given in the introduction to this article. Another characteristic is the agreement in the participations that have different forms for the sexes: 14. Indeterminate pronouns usually take individual verbs (with a few exceptions). When subjects are connected by or even, etc., the verb corresponds to the nearest subject. (Proximity rule) [5] In some cases, adjectives and participatorys, as preachers, do not seem to agree with their subjects.
This phenomenon is called pancake phrases. We will use the standard to highlight themes once and verbs twice. 9. If subjects are related to both singular and the words „or,“ „nor,“ „neither/nor,“ „either/or“ or „not only/but also,“ the verb is singular.