USTET Language Proficiency — Subject-Verb AgreementSlides
Presentation-style slides for Subject-Verb Agreement — the fastest way to cover the chapter if you are reviewing on your phone between classes or shifts. Covers everything University of Santo Tomas tests on this chapter in the USTET Language Proficiency subtest.
Exam context
University of Santo Tomas runs the University of Santo Tomas Entrance Test on Early Q4 2026. Its Language Proficiency section sits under a "Core" weighting, and Subject-Verb Agreement is the 2nd chapter in the 7-chapter USTET Language Proficiency rotation. The USTET passing mark is Competitive overall score, and the most recent 2026 paper drew about a meaningful share of questions from Language Proficiency.
Subject-Verb Agreement - Slides
Subject-verb agreement is a fundamental grammar rule in English that ensures the subject and verb in a sentence match in number (singular or plural). This chapter will teach you the essential rules and patterns that will help you identify correct subject-verb agreement in various sentence structures, which is crucial for success in college entrance exams like UPCAT, ACET, and other CETs.
Slides
Introduction to Subject-Verb Agreement
Subject-verb agreement is like a partnership - the subject and verb must work together harmoniously. When you have one person or thing (singular), the verb shows this with an -s ending. When you have multiple people or things (plural), the verb drops the -s.
Notes
Remember: It's always the verb that agrees with the subject, never the other way around.
Topic
Basic Concept
Slide Id
S1
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
1
Mermaid Diagram
Code
mindmap root((Subject-Verb Agreement)) Basic Rule Singular subject Takes -s verb One person thing Plural subject Takes base verb Multiple people things Examples Student studies Students study Cat runs Cats run
Type
mermaid_mindmap
Description
Mind map showing the basic concept of subject-verb agreement with singular and plural forms
The Memory Table
This table is your best friend for subject-verb agreement. The key is correctly identifying whether your subject is singular (one) or plural (more than one). Once you know that, the verb form follows automatically.
Notes
Always start by identifying the true subject of the sentence, then apply this table.
Topic
Basic Rule Application
Slide Id
S2
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
2
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Identify the Subject] --> B{Is it Singular or Plural?} B -->|Singular| C[Use verb WITH -s] B -->|Plural| D[Use verb WITHOUT -s] C --> E[The cat runs] D --> F[The cats run] E --> G[Correct Agreement!] F --> G
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Flowchart showing the decision process for choosing the correct verb form
Personal Pronouns as Subjects
Personal pronouns follow specific patterns. The third-person singular pronouns (he, she, it) always take the -s form of verbs, while all other personal pronouns take the base form without -s.
Notes
Remember: 'You' is special - it always takes plural verbs even when referring to one person.
Topic
Personal Pronouns
Slide Id
S3
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
3
Mermaid Diagram
Code
pie title Personal Pronoun Categories "Singular with -s: he, she, it" : 30 "All others: I, you, we, they" : 70
Type
mermaid_pie
Description
Pie chart showing the distribution of personal pronoun agreement patterns
Subjects Joined by 'And'
When two or more subjects are connected by 'and', they typically form a compound subject that is plural. However, if the compound subject refers to a single person, thing, or concept, it takes a singular verb.
Notes
Look for articles (the, a, an) to help determine if it's one entity or separate entities.
Topic
Compound Subjects with And
Slide Id
S4
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
4
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Subjects joined by AND] --> B{Same person/unit?} B -->|Yes| C[Singular verb with -s] B -->|No| D[Plural verb without -s] C --> E[Mother and wife was here] D --> F[Boys and girls are playing]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Decision tree for subjects joined by 'and'
Subjects Joined by 'Or' and 'Nor'
Unlike 'and', when subjects are joined by 'or' or 'nor', we don't add them together. Instead, the verb agrees with whichever subject is closer to it. This makes sense because 'or' suggests one or the other, not both.
Notes
Always look at the subject immediately before the verb when dealing with 'or' and 'nor'.
Topic
Or and Nor Constructions
Slide Id
S5
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
5
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart LR A[Subject 1] --> B[OR/NOR] --> C[Subject 2] --> D[VERB] C -.->|agrees with| D E[The boy] --> F[or] --> G[the girls] --> H[are playing] G -.->|plural| H
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Flow showing how the nearest subject determines verb agreement with or/nor
Indefinite Pronouns - Part 1: Always Singular
These indefinite pronouns might seem like they refer to multiple people or things, but grammatically they are always treated as singular. Think of 'everyone' as 'every single one' - each individual person, not a group.
Notes
Memory tip: Words ending in -one, -body, and -thing are always singular.
Topic
Singular Indefinite Pronouns
Slide Id
S6
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
6
Mermaid Diagram
Code
mindmap root((Always Singular Indefinites)) Each Group each either neither Everyone Group everyone everybody someone somebody No Group no one nobody nothing Everything Group everything anything something
Type
mermaid_mindmap
Description
Mind map categorizing singular indefinite pronouns by related groups
Indefinite Pronouns - Part 2: Always Plural
Unlike the singular indefinite pronouns, these words clearly indicate multiple items. They inherently suggest more than one, so they always take plural verbs.
Notes
These are easier to remember because they obviously refer to multiple things.
Topic
Plural Indefinite Pronouns
Slide Id
S7
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
7
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Always Plural Indefinites] --> B[both] A --> C[several] A --> D[few] A --> E[many] B --> F[take base verbs] C --> F D --> F E --> F F --> G[Both play well]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Flowchart showing plural indefinite pronouns and their verb requirements
Variable Indefinite Pronouns
These special indefinite pronouns change their agreement based on context. Look at what comes after 'of' to determine if the pronoun is singular or plural. If it's a mass noun (uncountable), use singular. If it's a count noun (countable), use plural.
Notes
Key: Look at the noun after 'of' to determine if it's countable (plural verb) or uncountable (singular verb).
Topic
Variable Indefinite Pronouns
Slide Id
S8
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
8
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[all, any, most, none, some] --> B[Look at the OF phrase] B --> C{Mass noun or Count noun?} C -->|Mass noun singular| D[Use singular verb with -s] C -->|Count noun plural| E[Use plural verb without -s] D --> F[Some of the cake IS good] E --> G[Some of the cookies ARE good]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Decision process for variable indefinite pronouns based on the noun they modify
Intervening Phrases
Don't be fooled by words that come between the subject and verb. These intervening phrases are like parenthetical information - they add details but don't change the number of the main subject.
Notes
Cross out or mentally ignore intervening phrases to identify the true subject-verb relationship.
Topic
Intervening Phrases
Slide Id
S9
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
9
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart LR A[Main Subject] --> B[Intervening Phrase] --> C[Verb] A -.->|agrees with| C B -.->|ignore for agreement| C D[The student] --> E[with friends] --> F[studies] D -.->|singular agrees| F
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Shows how intervening phrases should be ignored when determining subject-verb agreement
There Is vs There Are
In sentences beginning with 'there', the word 'there' is just an introductory word (expletive). The real subject comes after the verb 'is' or 'are'. You must identify this real subject to choose the correct verb form.
Notes
Always look for the noun that comes after 'is' or 'are' in 'there' sentences - that's your real subject.
Topic
There Is/Are Constructions
Slide Id
S10
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
10
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Sentence starts with THERE] --> B[Find the real subject after the verb] B --> C{Is the real subject singular or plural?} C -->|Singular| D[Use THERE IS] C -->|Plural| E[Use THERE ARE] D --> F[There IS a book] E --> G[There ARE books]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Decision process for choosing between 'there is' and 'there are'
Collective Nouns
Collective nouns can be tricky because they represent groups. If the group is acting together as one unit, use a singular verb. If the members are acting individually, use a plural verb. Look for clues in the sentence context.
Notes
Look for context clues: words like 'together', 'unanimously' suggest unity (singular), while 'different', 'various' suggest individuals (plural).
Topic
Collective Nouns
Slide Id
S11
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
11
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Collective Noun] --> B{Acting as one unit or individuals?} B -->|One unit| C[Singular verb with -s] B -->|Individuals| D[Plural verb without -s] C --> E[The class IS ready] D --> F[The class HAVE different answers]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Decision tree for collective noun agreement based on unity vs. individuality
A Number vs The Number
This is a common test question! The article makes all the difference. 'A number of' focuses on the individual items (plural), while 'the number of' focuses on the quantity as a single concept (singular).
Notes
Memory tip: 'A number' = many things (plural), 'The number' = one amount (singular).
Topic
Number Expressions
Slide Id
S12
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
12
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Number Expression] --> B{A number or The number?} B -->|A number of| C[Focus on items - PLURAL verb] B -->|The number of| D[Focus on quantity - SINGULAR verb] C --> E[A number of books ARE missing] D --> F[The number of books HAS increased]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Comparison between 'a number of' and 'the number of' constructions
Amounts, Money, and Measurements
When we talk about amounts of money, periods of time, or measurements, we're thinking of them as single units or totals, even if the words look plural. 'Fifty pesos' is one amount of money, not fifty individual peso coins.
Notes
Think of these as single, complete amounts rather than individual items.
Topic
Measurements and Amounts
Slide Id
S13
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
13
Mermaid Diagram
Code
mindmap root((Singular Units)) Money Fifty pesos IS Ten dollars WAS Time Two hours IS Three weeks SEEMS Distance Five kilometers IS Ten miles WAS Weight Three kilos COSTS Five pounds IS
Type
mermaid_mindmap
Description
Mind map showing different types of measurements that take singular verbs
Special Plural and Singular Nouns
English has some tricky nouns that don't follow the usual rules. Some look plural but represent single concepts (like 'mathematics'), while others are always plural (like 'scissors') because they have two parts.
Notes
Memorize these exceptions - they appear frequently in exams!
Topic
Special Noun Forms
Slide Id
S14
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
14
Mermaid Diagram
Code
pie title Special Noun Categories "Plural form, singular meaning" : 40 "Always plural" : 35 "Regular nouns" : 25
Type
mermaid_pie
Description
Distribution of special noun categories that don't follow standard agreement rules
Common Mistakes and Tips
Most subject-verb agreement errors come from not identifying the true subject or being distracted by intervening words. Practice identifying the core subject-verb relationship in complex sentences.
Notes
When in doubt, simplify the sentence by removing extra phrases and focusing on the core subject-verb relationship.
Topic
Error Prevention
Slide Id
S15
Visual Type
mermaid
Image Prompt
Slide Number
15
Mermaid Diagram
Code
flowchart TD A[Read the sentence] --> B[Find the main subject] B --> C[Ignore intervening phrases] C --> D[Determine if subject is singular or plural] D --> E[Choose matching verb form] E --> F[Double-check your choice] F --> G[Correct Agreement!]
Type
mermaid_flowchart
Description
Step-by-step process for ensuring correct subject-verb agreement
Practice Strategies for Exams
Success in subject-verb agreement questions requires systematic practice. Develop a consistent approach to identifying subjects and verbs, and practice with real exam questions from UPCAT, ACET, and other college entrance tests.
Notes
Regular practice with varied sentence structures will make subject-verb agreement automatic.
Topic
Exam Strategies
Slide Id
S16
Visual Type
none
Image Prompt
Slide Number
16
Mermaid Diagram
Type
none
References
- CET 2026 Comprehensive Lecture Notes - Language Proficiency & Reading Comprehension Section
- BrainBox UPCAT and Other College Entrance - Language Proficiency
- The UPCAT Champion CET - Language Proficiency
In summary
Subject-verb agreement is a fundamental skill for academic success and professional communication. By mastering these rules and practicing regularly, you'll avoid common grammar errors and improve your performance on college entrance exams. Remember the basic principle: identify the true subject, determine if it's singular or plural, and choose the matching verb form. With consistent practice, these rules will become second nature.
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Grammar Fundamentals — Parts of Speech & Determiners
Next chapter
Sentence Improvement & Correct Usage
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