I am confusing the verb + s, as Verb agreement
I knew this case used present tense, when this he, she or it.
But I saw some grammar book said, If the noun is plural , then the verb use plural too.
This make me confusing, as e.g. She wakes up early.
'She' is not plural, but used the verb+s
Is it verb+s = plural ?
In most regular verbs, when it ends with S it is with a singular noun, not a plural noun.
He cooks dinner.
They cook dinner.
She sings in the shower.
They sing in the car.
Last edited by Barb_D; 02-Feb-2012 at 13:01.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Understand! Thanks a lot everyone.