Subject-Verb Agreement Rules, Simplified

Definition of subject-verb agreement with examples from the article.

You might think that subject-verb agreement would be pretty simple. However, it can get quite tricky depending on the complexity of the sentence. Learn the subject-verb agreement rules through several examples. Use a colorful printable to help them stick in your mind.

In this article

What Is Subject-Verb Agreement?

Subject-verb agreement means that you’re using singular verbs with singular nouns and plural verbs with plural nouns. The verbs then “agree” with the subject of the sentence, which can be a noun or a pronoun.

What Are the Rules of Subject-Verb Agreement?

Most times, you can tell if a sentence has proper subject-verb agreement by reading it out loud. “The children laughs at the clown” doesn’t sound correct to English speakers, so the subject-verb agreement error is easy to spot and fix.

However, there are specific subject-verb agreement rules to follow in case the answer isn’t obvious in a specific sentence.

Seven common rules for subject-verb agreement with examples from the article.

DESCRIPTION Chart of common rules for subject-verb agreement Created by YourDictionary PERMISSION Owned by YourDictionary, copyright YourDictionary

Subjects and Verbs Must Agree in Number

Singular subjects, specifically third-person singular nouns and pronouns (he, she, it), get singular verbs. Everything else gets plural verbs.

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Don’t Use Singular Verbs With “I” or “You”

Even though the pronouns I and you are singular, they don’t agree with singular verbs. Make sure you conjugate first and second-person sentences correctly as well.

Subjects Agree With Verbs, Even When They Are Separated

When phrases or clauses come between the subject and verb, don’t make the last word of the phrase agree with the verb. Find the actual subject of the sentence (which might be far from the verb) to follow subject-verb agreement.

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Use Plural Verbs for Compound Subjects Using “And”

Treat compound subjects as plural nouns, and use plural verbs for subject-verb agreement.

Use Singular Verbs for Singular Compound Subjects Using “Or”

If singular subjects are connected by the conjunctions or, neither/nor, or either/or, the verb is singular. (Try to remove one subject and see if the verb still works.)

Use Plural Verbs For Plural Compound Subjects Using “Or”

If subjects connected by or, neither/nor, or either/or are both plural, the verb is also plural. (Same rule as above — remove one subject and see if it works.)