The accusative form of I, the plural form and the accusative form of the plural form The accusative form of I, the plural form and the accusative form of the plural form
I (nominative) me (accusative)
We (nominative) us (accusative)
She (nominative) her (accusative)
He (nominative) him (accusative)
It (nominative) it (accusative)
They (nominative) they (accusative)
Either of them and each of them
The old woman has two grandsons.____ middle school student.
A each of them is a B either of them is a C both of them are d they are both
The old lady has two grandchildren. One of them is a middle school student
Use one of the two either.each Is used for three or more
Both tables are. If you use this, it should be followed by a negative number. Students
Is it OK to have both the singular and the plural?
None of them.
Neither of them...
After the predicate verb, with the singular, or plural
Please give an example
For sentences that begin with none of, the predicate verb can be singular or plural
When we emphasize the individual, we use the singular; when we emphasize the whole, we use the plural
The predicate after "neither of them" is the third person singular
Because it's "none of them will."
One of them predicate verb singular or plural
The subject must be singular
One of them is from America .
Come on! Ask again if you don't understand!
Is the predicate verb singular or plural
Plural
Is the predicate verb after a couple singular or plural
one hundred and twenty-three
The plural a couple is a one-to-one pair. Of course, we need to use the plural
Is many a plural of countable nouns?
Many friends, many books, many friends, many books, many friends, many books;
Many, followed by uncountable nouns, such as: much money, much time
In the if conditional sentence, add a countable noun after any, singular or plural?
For example, "if you have any questions":
If you have any questions or if you have any questions
"Any" means "some". It can modify the plural and uncountable nouns of countable nouns. It can be used as subject, object and attribute in sentences. It is often used in negative sentences and interrogative sentences, such as: do you have any money? (as attribute) I have some sweets.Do You have any
The usage and difference of every + ordinal + singular noun and every + cardinal + plural noun
"Every + ordinal + singular" = "every + cardinal + plural"
every third day = every three days
Every three days, every two days
Is every followed by the singular or plural of a noun?
Every is followed by the singular form of the noun
For example:
The library is open every day.
The library is open every day
Not every horse can run fast.
Not every horse can run fast