No one is the subject. Is the predicate singular or plural

No one is the subject. Is the predicate singular or plural

There are some special cases, but most of them are singular
Is "chocolate" plural with "s"?
I remember the singular and plural
There are a lot of things that can't be absolute. Let's look at the context. If we say chocolate in general, it's singular. We can't use the plural. But if we talk about chocolate varieties, black, white, cocoa butter substitutes, different shapes and packaging, we can use the plural. This situation is just like people. When we talk about race and nationality, we can use the plural
It's a material noun, uncountable
When the subject is the singular third person, s is added to the verb, such as he reads book. We should add ing after be, and there are some other rules. Example: I am
What is the regulation of plural structure of words ending in "ch" and "sh"?
What I'm talking about is what's special and not special at the end of SH / Ch. is there any law?
End with sh. ch, add - es, such as brush brushes, watch watches and S. x, and also add - es, such as bus buses, box boxes 1. Generally, add - s directly, such as book books, bag bags, cat cats, bed beds 2. End with S. X. sh. ch, add - es, such as bu
When there are nouns as subjects before and after "and", should the predicate be singular or plural?
Please give me an example
Use the plural as the predicate
For example:
Tom and his mother are going shopping tomorrow.
When do words add s except plural
For example, lots of people visit
famous universities campuses
In addition to the plural, it means when to add s to a word
There's also ing
What I want to ask is under what circumstances, adding s does not deform.
S is added to the plural of English names and the third singular of verbs
If it ends with a vowel and a Y, add s directly, e.g. play plays
For example, strawberry strawberries
Add es ending with s, x, SH, CH, such as box boxes
Living direct plus s
That's about it
The others just add s
Is there only four plural words ending in o plus es? Is there no other word?
Add es to the words ending with "O": tomato, potato, hero, zero, mango, Negro
For nouns ending with O, we can remember their plural form according to the following rule:
It refers to the plus es of people and crops, and other plus s
(or living plus es, inanimate plus s)
These four are commonly used. There is no need to recite the others, but some of them are not harmful
Photo on the first floor is one of the four, but it seems to be the abbreviation of photography
Should not, as long as it is an abbreviation are directly added s, such as photo is the abbreviation of photo.
It refers to the plus es of people and crops, and other plus s
Is the use of the singular or plural when audience is the subject
It's not the same as people's ca
The predicate is plural
When the plural form of a noun is added with s, when is the s pronounced / S / when is / Z /?
The original word ends with a clear consonant, s read / s/
Ending with Z and consonant / S/
The nouns ending with O become plural, which ones are added with ES!
There are four o-ending words with es: tomato, potato, hero and Negro
tomato
potato
hero
Except for these three, the others are all direct + s
For example: potato, tomato and hero are all added with es.
thank you!
Find a dictionary... That's what I do·
The living plus es, the inanimate plus s
The singular and plural forms of two uncountable nouns as subject predicate
the tendency of population boom and shortage of resources __ Is or are?
The tense of population boom and (the) shortening of resources are two different things. When they are used as subjects, the predicate verb is are
(both) air and water are necessary for life
ARE
are.
Although subject is two uncountable nouns, it refers to two different subjects, so we use are, plural.
Use are. If it is one, use singular; countable noun as subject, you should be clear!
the tendency of population boom and shortage of resources _ are_ not properly controlled
Use are