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AFPSAT Verbal AbilitySubject-Verb AgreementCheat Sheet

Subject-Verb Agreement cheat sheet for AFPSAT aspirants. If you could only take one sheet of paper into your review session, this is what it would look like. Armed Forces of the Philippines's most-tested concepts, all in one place.

Exam context

On the AFPSAT 2026, the Verbal Ability subtest carries a "Core" weight in Armed Forces of the Philippines's pattern. Subject-Verb Agreement lands at position 3rd out of 7 in the standard review order. Target score is AFP-set percentile, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Verbal Ability on a typical AFPSAT paper.

Subject-Verb Agreement - Cheat sheet

Your last-minute revision companion for Chapter: Subject-Verb Agreement. Master all agreement rules in 30 minutes!

Sections

Section Title

Basic Agreement Rules

Important Facts

  • It is the simple subject that continuously determines the number of the verb
  • Subject-verb agreement applies to present tense and past forms of 'to be' (was/were)
  • Singular subjects match singular verbs; plural subjects need plural verbs
  • Third person singular pronouns (he, she, it) take singular verbs
  • First and second person pronouns (I, you, we, they) take plural verbs except 'I am/was'

Key Definitions

Term

Subject-Verb Agreement

Example

She runs (singular) vs They run (plural)

Definition

Unity of verb and subject in person and number - singular subjects take singular verbs, plural subjects take plural verbs

Term

Simple Subject

Example

The box of pencils belongs (subject is 'box', not 'pencils')

Definition

The main noun or pronoun that determines verb number, ignoring modifying phrases

Section Title

Tricky Sentence Structures

Important Facts

  • Here is/There is + singular subject; Here are/There are + plural subject
  • In interrogative sentences, subject usually comes between helping and main verb
  • Imperatives have understood subject 'you' - always take plural verbs
  • In passive sentences, subject is acted upon, not the doer
  • Cross out prepositional phrases and clauses between subject and verb

Key Definitions

Term

Expletives

Example

There are five men walking (subject: men)

Definition

Sentences beginning with 'here is/are' or 'there is/are' - subject comes after verb

Term

Reversed Order

Example

Among the ingredients is sugar → Sugar is among the ingredients

Definition

Subject comes after main verb - rearrange to identify subject

Common Values

Value

singular verb

Symbol

The number of students is...

Quantity

The number

Value

plural verb

Symbol

A number of students are...

Quantity

A number

Section Title

Peculiar Subjects

Important Facts

  • Distance, time, money, measurements as units = singular verb (Twenty miles is far)
  • Gerunds, infinitives, noun clauses as subjects = singular verb
  • Book titles, movie titles = singular verb regardless of plural form
  • Nouns ending in -s but singular meaning: statistics, economics, mumps, measles, news
  • Always plural nouns: glasses, scissors, pants, trousers, pliers
  • Subjunctive 'were' replaces 'was' in wishes/contrary-to-fact statements

Key Definitions

Term

Collective Nouns

Example

The team wins (as unit) vs The team are arguing (individuals)

Definition

Singular when acting as one unit, plural when referring to individual members

Term

Noncount Nouns

Example

Information was helpful; News is good

Definition

Always take singular verbs regardless of appearance

Section Title

Compound Subjects and Conjunctions

Important Facts

  • Subjects joined by 'and' = plural verb (except when one unit)
  • Subjects joined by 'or', 'nor', 'either-or', 'neither-nor' = verb agrees with nearer subject
  • Positive + negative compound: verb agrees with positive subject
  • Intervening phrases (with, along with, as well as, together with) don't affect verb number
  • If compound has singular + plural: verb agrees with nearer subject

Key Definitions

Term

Compound Subject with AND

Example

John and Pete are here vs Bacon and egg is breakfast

Definition

Usually plural unless subjects form one unit

Term

Either-Or/Neither-Nor Rule

Example

Neither students nor teacher is ready

Definition

Verb agrees with nearer subject to the verb

Section Title

Indefinite Pronouns

Important Facts

  • Singular indefinites: anyone, everyone, someone, no one, nobody, each, every, everybody, somebody, everything, something, nothing, anything, either, neither
  • Plural indefinites: both, few, many, several
  • Variable indefinites: all, any, most, none, some - depend on 'of' phrase that follows
  • Fractions/percentages: verb agrees with noun after 'of' phrase
  • Demonstrative pronouns: this/that = singular; these/those = plural

Key Definitions

Term

Singular Indefinites

Example

Everyone wants to attend; Nothing is wrong

Definition

Always take singular verbs: each, every, either, neither, everyone, somebody, nothing

Term

Plural Indefinites

Example

Both are coming; Many prefer online classes

Definition

Always take plural verbs: both, few, many, several

Must Remember

  • Singular subjects take singular verbs (-s form); plural subjects take plural verbs (base form)
  • Cross out prepositional phrases between subject and verb to find true subject
  • Either-or/Neither-nor: verb agrees with NEARER subject
  • The number = singular; A number = plural
  • Each, every, either, neither = always singular
  • Both, few, many, several = always plural
  • Collective nouns: singular as unit, plural as individuals
  • Here/There sentences: subject comes AFTER verb
  • Money, time, distance as amounts = singular verb
  • Book titles and proper nouns = singular verb regardless of form

Last Minute Tips

  • When in doubt, find the subject first by asking 'who' or 'what' before the verb
  • Cover intervening phrases with your hand to see subject-verb connection clearly
  • For either-or/neither-nor, always look at the subject closest to the verb
  • Remember: 'The number IS' but 'A number ARE' - memorize this pattern
  • If you see 'each' or 'every', the answer is almost always singular

Comparison Tables

Rows

Values

  • each, every, either, neither, everyone, somebody, nothing
  • both, few, many, several
  • all, any, most, none, some

Property

Examples

Values

  • Singular (-s form)
  • Plural (base form)
  • Depends on 'of' phrase

Property

Verb Form

Values

  • Everyone is here
  • Both are ready
  • Some of the cake is/are gone

Property

Sample

Columns

  • Always Singular
  • Always Plural
  • Variable (depends on context)

Table Title

Singular vs Plural Indefinite Pronouns

Rows

Values

  • Singular
  • Plural

Property

Verb Form

Values

  • Emphasizes the total/quantity
  • Emphasizes the items/individuals

Property

Focus

Values

  • The number of students is 50
  • A number of students are absent

Property

Example

Columns

  • The Number
  • A Number

Table Title

The Number vs A Number

Rows

Values

  • Usually plural (except one unit)
  • John and Mary are here

Property

AND

Values

  • Agrees with nearer subject
  • John or his friends are coming

Property

OR/NOR

Values

  • Agrees with nearer subject
  • Either John or Mary is responsible

Property

EITHER-OR/NEITHER-NOR

Values

  • Agrees with nearer subject
  • Not only students but also teacher is ready

Property

NOT ONLY-BUT ALSO

Columns

  • Conjunction
  • Rule
  • Example

Table Title

Compound Subject Conjunctions

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