[Grammar] Subject-verb agreement when "who" is involved

Status
Not open for further replies.

duncsgita

New member
Joined
May 26, 2009
Member Type
English Teacher
Can any one tell me which of the following is correct and why:
It is you who has to put them into practice.
OR
It is you who have to put them into practice.

Generally relative pronouns follow the subject they replace, but in this case it is introducing a subordinate clause, so I am confused. Who can clarify this?
 

lauralie2

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Member Type
Retired English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
Canada
Current Location
China
Hi duncsgita


  1. It is you who has to put them into practice. :tick:
  2. It is you who have to put them into practice. :cross:

The subject is who, not you. By default, who is singular in number which makes the verb has singular in number too.
 

duncsgita

New member
Joined
May 26, 2009
Member Type
English Teacher
Thank you for this, Lauralie2. It makes sense to me, but I was confused by the rule that says the relative pronoun agrees in number and case with the pronoun it replaces: e.g. "The students who have forgotten their books can borrow copies from the library." or "These are the students who have special needs." I struggle to articulate how my earlier example is different to these two, where "who" is not singular. Can you explain that to me?
 

corum

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 8, 2010
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Hungarian
Home Country
Hungary
Current Location
Hungary
Thank you for this, Lauralie2. It makes sense to me, but I was confused by the rule that says the relative pronoun agrees in number and case with the pronoun it replaces: e.g. "The students who have forgotten their books can borrow copies from the library." or "These are the students who have special needs." I struggle to articulate how my earlier example is different to these two, where "who" is not singular. Can you explain that to me?

https://www.usingenglish.com/forum/...5-verbal-governance-relatives.html#post578345
 

TheParser

VIP Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2009
Member Type
Other
Native Language
English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
Can any one tell me which of the following is correct and why:
It is you who has to put them into practice.
OR
It is you who have to put them into practice.

Generally relative pronouns follow the subject they replace, but in this case it is introducing a subordinate clause, so I am confused. Who can clarify this?

***** NOT A TEACHER *****

(1) Let's look at a similar sentence:

It is I who ___ at fault.

(2) One scholar in his book agrees that -- logicially -- it should be:

It is I who is at fault. = It (who is at fault) is I.

(3) But most books agree that nowadays the "correct"

answer is:

It is I who am at fault.

The reasoning: "am shows us that the relative pronoun agrees with

its antecedent in person and number." (Source: Descriptive English

Grammar by House and Harman.)

(4) Thus, you may wish to say:

It is you who have to put them into practice.
 

Pedroski

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2009
Member Type
Other
Native Language
British English
Home Country
UK
Current Location
China
I would agree with Parser:

It's up to you, you have to put them into practice.
It's you who have to put them into practice.
 

lauralie2

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Member Type
Retired English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
Canada
Current Location
China
(1) Let's look at a similar sentence:

It is I who ___ at fault.

(2) One scholar in his book agrees that -- logicially -- it should be:

It is I who is at fault. = It (who is at fault) is I.
It could just as well be argued that 'is' be singular because the true antecedent is the noun phrase 'the one':

  • It is I, the one, who is at fault.
  • It is you, the one, who is at fault.


  • It is they, the ones, who are at fault.

(3) But most books agree that nowadays the "correct"

answer is:

It is I who am at fault.

The reasoning: "am shows us that the relative pronoun agrees with its antecedent in person and number." (Source: Descriptive English Grammar by House and Harman.)
It's a fabulous example of how grammar changes over time, and, yes, Present Day English 'I who am' sounds more natural to me as well.

(4) Thus, you may wish to say:

It is you who have to put them into practice.
It sounds rather archaic, not to mention overly pedantic. I, for one, wouldn't wish to say it or wish it upon anyone to say. :lol:
 

corum

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 8, 2010
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Hungarian
Home Country
Hungary
Current Location
Hungary
Can any one tell me which of the following is correct and why:
It is you who has to put them into practice.
OR
It is you who have to put them into practice.

Generally relative pronouns follow the subject they replace, but in this case it is introducing a subordinate clause, so I am confused. Who can clarify this?

Who has to put them into practice?
Who has to put them into practice is you.
It is you (who has to put them into practice). -- 'who' in the bracketed clause does not relate to 'you' in the same manner as 'who' relate in

I, who have been teaching, know how to...

to 'I'. It is not

It is [you who has to put them into practice], but it is

[Who has to put them into practice] is you.

The link I provided is not so much related to this thread as I thought at first glance. Or so I think. The wh-clause is raised out of the subject position and its landing site is after the subject complement. Wh-clause and subject complement 'you', they are not one syntactically.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top