[Grammar] is/are

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Aug 15, 2010
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Russian
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Russian Federation
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Russian Federation
Hi,


What's the correct version?

1) I am confident that my professional experience and academic excellence ARE an indicator that ...

OR

2) I am confident that my professional experience and academic excellence IS an indicator that ...
Thank you.
 
Which do you think is correct? How many qualities have you listed?
 
The correct version is the one that doesn't make me wince.

;-)
 
Well I thought "are" is the correct version but a native speaker corrected me, saying it's "is" because it's "one quality with multiple facets". Not to mention that Microsoft Word's spell checker suggested the same, "is". So now I'm confused.
 
Either one works for me.
 
I would use "are", but I would also change "an indicator" to "indicators". You have two qualities and two indicators.
 
I'm with Mike. I don't think the qualities can be combined but after "are", "an indicator" doesn't work.
 
I am not a teacher.

It's 'are'.

Two things connected by 'and' take a plural verb unless they are considered as one entity.

I hate it when my gin and tonic is not chilled. Fish and chips is a British classic.
 
Two things connected by 'and' take a plural verb unless they are considered as one entity.
That's exactly right. But most of these questions here are actually asking whether the two things are considered as one entity.
 
I don't consider them one entity.
 
I agree, Barb.
 
I have the same problem with this: "The passion for research and study, along with my perpetual desire to xxxx HAS stirred my interest in ...".
 
I am not a teacher.

The subject this time is 'the passion' and therefore takes a singular verb.

'Along with' isn't the same as 'and'.
 
View the sentence this way:

The passion for research and study (along with my perpetual desire to xxx) has stirred my interest in xxx.


:)
 
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