Basic Singular & Plural Exercises (Easy)
A1 Level
In English, the verb must match its subject in number. A singular subject (one person or thing) takes a verb with -s in the present simple: "She walks to school" and "The cat sleeps all day." A plural subject (two or more) takes a verb without -s: "They walk to school" and "The cats sleep all day." This basic rule is called subject-verb agreement, and it is one of the first grammar rules every learner needs to know.
To choose the correct verb, find the subject first. Ask yourself: who or what is doing the action? If the answer is one person or thing (he, she, it), add -s to the verb. If the answer is more than one (they, we), do not add -s. The pronouns I and you always use the verb form without -s: "I walk" and "You walk." Forgetting the -s with he, she, or it is one of the most common mistakes at this level, and it is frequently tested in A1 and A2 examinations.
To choose the correct verb, find the subject first. Ask yourself: who or what is doing the action? If the answer is one person or thing (he, she, it), add -s to the verb. If the answer is more than one (they, we), do not add -s. The pronouns I and you always use the verb form without -s: "I walk" and "You walk." Forgetting the -s with he, she, or it is one of the most common mistakes at this level, and it is frequently tested in A1 and A2 examinations.
Quick Rule
singular subject + verb-s | plural subject + verb (no -s)
- 1.She likes chocolate ice cream. (singular subject — verb adds -s)
- 2.My parents live near the park. (plural subject — no -s on verb)
- 3.He doesn't want any coffee this morning. (singular negative — doesn't + base verb)
- 4.We enjoy playing football after school. (plural subject — no -s)
- 5.It rains a lot in November. (singular "it" — verb adds -s)
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