It`s usually simple and simple. But what if the predictive name is plural and the subject is singular? If a personal pronoun in lieu of a noun in the question of the subject (me, you, she, us, you, her) or in the object (me, you, she, us, her, her, her), the pronoun should correspond to her name of person, number and sex. An additive sentence sometimes makes a sentence look like it has a compound theme. Examples of these sentences are accompanied, as well as, in addition, including, and with. If you use one of these phrases, think of more than one person or thing. But grammatically, these phrases are not conjunctions like and. You really change the subject instead of multiplying it. Therefore, do not use a plural verb, as these changing sentences are changed. In a sentence a possessive pronoun must correspond personally, the number and the sex with the Nostun or the pronoun to which it refers. Standard chords are shown in the following examples. If two dependent clauses, z.B.
two non-finished dependent clauses are linked with current holdings as predictive verbs, are linked and form together the subject, we get a pluralistic agreement, as in the following example: This is of course good news. However, there are a number of important exceptions that we must respect (in addition to reminding that the same name can be used in more ways than one), in part to get agreement between the subject and the verb correctly. Estling Vannest-hl (2007:99) contains the following list of substants who are countless in English, but recensable or pluralistic in Swedish (please note that the list should not be exhaustive): the first verb of a verb acting as a predictive verb, does not necessarily correspond to the head of the next sentence, but to the head of the noun sentence that acts as a subject in the clause in which the verb in question acts as a verb of preaching: when two sentences of singular nouns, which are bound by either or neither/or together, normally take as subject the singular interrelationship agreement in formal English: either the conjunctions or … or, and neither… and don`t ask to choose between things instead of adding things.