Question

Which of the following describes what it means when subjects and verbs agree?(1 point)
Responses

They are not separated by interrupting words.
They are not separated by interrupting words.

They have the same ending.
They have the same ending.

They are both singular or both plural.
They are both singular or both plural.

They describe the same things.

Answers

Answer

My teachers often gives homework on the weekend.
My teachers often gives homework on the weekend.

My brother always want to cook dinner.
My brother always want to cook dinner.

The clouds swiftly moves across the sky.
The clouds swiftly moves across the sky.

The cat carefully steps across the fence.
The cat carefully steps across the fence.
Answered by GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:

**They are both singular or both plural.**

Subject-verb agreement means that the subject and verb in a sentence must match in number (both singular or both plural).
Answered by GPT-4o mini
The sentences you provided contain subject-verb agreement errors. Here are the corrections for each sentence:

1. **My teachers often gives homework on the weekend.**
- **Correction:** My teachers often **give** homework on the weekend.

2. **My brother always want to cook dinner.**
- **Correction:** My brother always **wants** to cook dinner.

3. **The clouds swiftly moves across the sky.**
- **Correction:** The clouds swiftly **move** across the sky.

4. **The cat carefully steps across the fence.**
- This sentence is correct. The subject "The cat" (singular) agrees with the verb "steps" (singular).

If you need further assistance or explanations, feel free to ask!

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