Subject-Verb Agreement

60 minutes Intermediate 48 Questions
Topic Overview

Master 8 advanced subject-verb agreement rules — from collective nouns to inverted sentences — with clear rules, examples, and exam traps for NTS, PPSC, FPSC, CSS, and entry tests.

Complete Topic Overview

Topic Introduction

Most students learn subject-verb agreement early — singular takes singular, plural takes plural. But competitive exams don't test the easy cases. They test the eight situations where the subject is disguised, inverted, interrupted, or grammatically tricky enough that even careful readers choose the wrong verb. This topic covers all eight of those advanced patterns in one place.
 

Video :  Subject_Verb_Agreement
 

This topic covers:

  • Collective nouns as subjects
  • Indefinite pronouns as subjects
  • Compound subjects with and / or / nor
  • Inverted sentences
  • Relative clauses & intervening phrases
  • Either…or / neither…nor constructions
  • Nouns plural in form but singular in meaning
  • Titles, amounts & distances as subjects

Subject-verb agreement is one of the most consistently tested grammar areas across NTS, PPSC, FPSC, CSS, and all major university entry tests — and the advanced patterns in this topic appear in the harder questions that separate top scorers from the rest.

Quick Concept Map

SubtopicOne-line definitionKey signal/clue word
Collective nouns as subjectsA noun naming a group can take singular or plural verb depending on whether the group acts as one unit or as individuals"team," "committee," "jury," "class," "family"
Indefinite pronouns as subjectsSome indefinite pronouns are always singular, some always plural, some depend on the noun they refer to"each," "everyone," "none," "some," "all," "either"
Compound subjects with and / or / nor"And" usually joins subjects to make a plural; "or/nor" makes the verb agree with the nearest subject"and," "or," "nor," "as well as," "along with"
Inverted sentencesWhen the verb comes before the subject, find the real subject first — don't agree with the first noun you see"There is/are," "Here comes/come," questions
Relative clauses & intervening phrasesThe verb inside a relative clause agrees with the clause's own subject (the antecedent), not with whatever noun sits closest"who," "which," "that" + phrase between subject and verb
Either…or / neither…nor constructionsThe verb agrees with the subject closer to it (the second subject)"either…or," "neither…nor," "not only…but also"
Nouns plural in form but singular in meaningSome nouns end in -s but name a single subject — they take a singular verb"news," "mathematics," "economics," "physics," "scissors" (when used as a concept)
Titles, amounts & distances as subjectsA title, a specific sum of money, a measured distance, or a span of time is treated as one unit — singular verbBook titles, "fifty kilometres," "two hours," "three hundred rupees"

Subtopic Deep-Dive

1. Collective Nouns as Subjects

Definition: A collective noun names a group of people or things using a single word (team, jury, committee, crowd, class, family). Whether it takes a singular or plural verb depends on whether the group is acting as one unified whole or as separate individuals.

Rule

When the group is...Verb formExample
Acting as ONE UNIT (together)Singular verbThe jury has reached a verdict. (one decision, together)
Acting as INDIVIDUALS (separately)Plural verbThe jury are still debating their individual opinions.

In Pakistani/South Asian competitive exams, the singular form is almost always the tested/expected answer for collective nouns unless the sentence explicitly shows divided, individual action.

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
The committee have announced its new policy.The committee has announced its new policy.
The team are playing well as a unit this season.The team is playing well as a unit this season.
The crowd were moving in one direction.The crowd was moving in one direction.

Common Mistake: Students see a collective noun and assume that because it refers to "many people," it must take a plural verb. The key is not the number of members but how the group is functioning in that specific sentence.

Exam Tip: In MCQ exams, if the sentence shows the group doing one thing together, pick the singular verb — it's almost always the correct answer in this format.

2. Indefinite Pronouns as Subjects

Definition: Indefinite pronouns refer to non-specific people or things. Some are always singular, some are always plural, and a small group can be either — depending on the noun they refer to in the sentence.

Rule

CategoryPronounsVerb form
Always singulareach, every, either, neither, one, anyone, everyone, someone, no one, anybody, everybody, somebody, nobody, another, much, littleSingular verb
Always pluralboth, few, many, others, severalPlural verb
Depends on context (check noun after "of")all, any, none, some, most, moreSingular if the "of" noun is uncountable; plural if the "of" noun is plural

Example of the context-dependent group: "Some of the water IS gone" (uncountable noun → singular). "Some of the students ARE absent" (plural noun → plural).

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
Each of the players are responsible for their position.Each of the players is responsible for their position.
Everyone in the three departments have been informed.Everyone in the three departments has been informed.
Both of the answers is correct.Both of the answers are correct.
None of the milk were spilled.None of the milk was spilled.

Common Mistake: Students match the verb to the noun inside the "of" phrase ("of the players" → "players" → plural verb). The actual subject is the indefinite pronoun before "of" — that is what the verb must agree with.

Exam Tip: Cover everything after the indefinite pronoun and ask: "Is this pronoun in the Always Singular or Always Plural group?" — then choose accordingly.

3. Compound Subjects with And / Or / Nor

Definition: When two or more subjects are joined by a conjunction, the verb form depends on which conjunction is used. "And" generally creates a plural subject; "or" and "nor" follow a different rule entirely.

Rule

StructureVerb formExample
Subject + AND + SubjectPlural verbRaza and Imran are both qualified.
Subject + OR/NOR + SubjectAgrees with the NEAREST subjectNeither the manager nor the employees were informed. (employees = plural → plural verb)
Subject + OR/NOR + Subject (reversed order)Agrees with the NEAREST subjectNeither the employees nor the manager was informed. (manager = singular → singular verb)
AND joining one unified conceptSingular verb (exception)Bread and butter IS a common breakfast. (one dish, one concept)

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
The principal and the vice-principal is attending the meeting.The principal and the vice-principal are attending the meeting.
Neither the doctor nor the nurses was available.Neither the doctor nor the nurses were available.
Either the students or the teacher are responsible.Either the students or the teacher is responsible.
Slow and steady win the race.Slow and steady wins the race. (one concept)

Common Mistake: Students apply the "or/nor" rule backwards — they agree the verb with the first subject instead of the second (nearest) subject. Always look at what comes immediately before the verb.

Exam Tip: With or/nor, cover the first subject and its conjunction — the verb only needs to agree with whatever is left standing beside it.

4. Inverted Sentences

Definition: In a normal sentence, the subject comes before the verb. In an inverted sentence, the verb comes first — and students mistakenly agree the verb with the first noun they read, which is often not the subject at all.

Rule

PatternExampleTrue subject
There + verb + subjectThere IS a problem. / There ARE three problems.problem / problems
Here + verb + subjectHere COMES the bus. / Here COME the students.bus / students
Questions: verb + subjectWHERE IS your bag? / WHERE ARE your bags?bag / bags

Find the true subject first, then choose the verb. "There" and "Here" are never the subject — they are just position words introducing the sentence.

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
There is many reasons to reconsider this plan.There are many reasons to reconsider this plan.
Here come the winning team.Here comes the winning team.
There are a list of instructions on the table.There is a list of instructions on the table.

Common Mistake: Treating "there" or "here" as the subject and agreeing the verb with it. These words introduce the sentence but are never the grammatical subject.

Exam Tip: Flip the inverted sentence back to normal order in your head — "Many reasons ARE there" — and the correct verb becomes obvious immediately.

5. Relative Clauses & Intervening Phrases

Definition: Sometimes a long phrase or a relative clause (who, which, that) is inserted between the subject and the verb. The verb must agree with the true subject of the sentence — not with whatever noun happens to be sitting closest to it.

Approach

StepAction
1Identify the main subject of the sentence
2Mentally cross out everything between that subject and the verb (prepositional phrases, relative clauses, appositives)
3Make the verb agree with the subject identified in Step 1

Inside a relative clause, the verb agrees with the antecedent (the noun the clause describes), not with other nouns nearby:

SentenceAntecedentVerb form
She is one of those teachers who INSPIRE students."those teachers" (plural)Plural verb
She is the only teacher who INSPIRES every student."the only teacher" (singular)Singular verb

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
The quality of these products have improved significantly.The quality of these products has improved significantly.
The minister, along with his advisors, are travelling to Geneva.The minister, along with his advisors, is travelling to Geneva.
He is one of those doctors who works without rest.He is one of those doctors who work without rest.
The box of chocolates were left on the desk.The box of chocolates was left on the desk.

Common Mistake: Matching the verb to the noun immediately before it — which is often the object of a preposition, not the subject. Students see "products" before the verb and write "have," missing that "quality" is the actual subject.

Exam Tip: Cross out every phrase starting with "of," "with," "along with," "as well as," or "including" — what remains before the verb is the true subject.

6. Either…or / Neither…nor Constructions

Definition: These are correlative conjunctions that connect two subjects. They follow the same "nearest subject" rule as or/nor, but their structure is more formal and they appear very frequently in exam questions.

Rule

ConstructionVerb agrees with
Either [Subject 1] or [Subject 2]Subject 2 (the nearer one)
Neither [Subject 1] nor [Subject 2]Subject 2 (the nearer one)
Not only [Subject 1] but also [Subject 2]Subject 2 (the nearer one)
Subject 1Subject 2Resulting verb form
SingularSingularSingular verb
PluralPluralPlural verb
SingularPluralPlural verb (nearest is plural)
PluralSingularSingular verb (nearest is singular)

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
Either the chairman or the directors is responsible.Either the chairman or the directors are responsible.
Neither the files nor the report were found.Neither the files nor the report was found.
Not only the students but also the teacher were praised.Not only the students but also the teacher was praised.
Either the boys or the girl are going to present first.Either the boys or the girl is going to present first.

Common Mistake: Defaulting to a plural verb whenever two subjects appear together, regardless of the conjunction. The "and = plural" logic does not apply to either…or / neither…nor — these constructions follow the nearest-subject rule.

Exam Tip: In either…or and neither…nor, the only subject that counts for verb agreement is the one that comes second — ignore the first entirely when deciding the verb form.

7. Nouns Plural in Form but Singular in Meaning

Definition: Some nouns look plural because they end in -s, but they actually name a single subject — a field of study, a game, a condition, or a concept. These take a singular verb. Other nouns only exist in plural form and always take a plural verb.

Rule

CategoryVerb formExamples
Plural in form, singular in meaning (academic subjects, diseases, -ics words)Singular verbMathematics IS a compulsory subject. / News IS spreading fast. / Physics HAS always fascinated her. / Measles IS a childhood disease. / Politics IS a sensitive topic. / Economics WAS her favourite subject.
Plural in form, plural in meaning (items that come in pairs)Plural verbThe scissors ARE on the table. / My trousers WERE torn. / The proceeds ARE going to charity. / Cattle ARE grazing in the field.

Memory aid: academic subjects, diseases, and most -ics words take singular verbs; items that come in pairs (scissors, trousers, glasses) take plural verbs.

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
Mathematics are considered a difficult subject by many students.Mathematics is considered a difficult subject by many students.
The news are shocking everyone in the country.The news is shocking everyone in the country.
The scissors is missing from the drawer.The scissors are missing from the drawer.
Politics have always been complicated in every era.Politics has always been complicated in every era.

Common Mistake: Seeing the -s ending and automatically choosing a plural verb. The rule is not about spelling — it's about whether the word names one single concept or genuinely refers to more than one item.

Exam Tip: When you see a word ending in -s as the subject, ask: "Is this one subject (a field, disease, concept) or genuinely many things?" — the answer decides the verb.

8. Titles, Amounts & Distances as Subjects

Definition: When a book title, film name, monetary amount, measured distance, span of time, or specific quantity acts as the subject of a sentence, it is treated as a single, unified unit — and always takes a singular verb.

Rule

CategoryVerb formExample
Titles (books, films, newspapers)Singular verb"Great Expectations" IS a novel by Charles Dickens.
Amounts of moneySingular verbFive thousand rupees IS not a small amount.
DistancesSingular verbSixty kilometres IS a long drive on that road.
Time spansSingular verbTwo hours IS enough to complete this paper. / Three weeks HAS passed since the announcement.
Fractions & percentagesAgrees with the noun after "of"Half of the work IS done (uncountable → singular). Half of the students ARE absent (plural → plural).

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
"The Arabian Nights" are a collection of ancient stories."The Arabian Nights" is a collection of ancient stories.
Twenty thousand rupees are not enough to cover the costs.Twenty thousand rupees is not enough to cover the costs.
Five kilometres are a long distance to walk every morning.Five kilometres is a long distance to walk every morning.
Forty-eight hours have passed since the incident.Forty-eight hours has passed since the incident.

Common Mistake: Treating a large number as proof of a plural subject. "Ten thousand rupees" feels plural because the number is large — but it is one amount, one sum, and takes a singular verb.

Exam Tip: If the subject names one title, one sum, one distance, or one period of time — no matter how many words or how large the number — it is singular and needs a singular verb.

Comparison Table

The following constructions are frequently confused because they all involve two subjects or -s-ending nouns:

FeatureAnd (Compound)Or / NorEither…or / Neither…norNouns -s form
Basic ruleAlmost always pluralAgree with nearest subjectAgree with nearest (second) subjectCheck meaning, not spelling
Both subjects singularPlural verbSingular verbSingular verbN/A
Both subjects pluralPlural verbPlural verbPlural verbN/A
Mixed (singular + plural)Plural verbAgree with whichever is second/nearestAgree with whichever is second/nearestN/A
ExceptionOne unified concept → singularPairs (scissors, trousers) → plural
Common exam trap"Bread and butter IS"Using first subject instead of secondApplying "and = plural" rule wronglyTreating -ics words as plural

Common Traps in This Topic

  • A prepositional phrase between subject and verb always contains a distractor noun — exam writers put it there deliberately to pull the verb toward the wrong word; cross it out mentally before choosing
  • "Along with," "as well as," "in addition to," and "together with" look like "and" but do NOT make a compound subject — the verb still agrees with the original subject only
  • "There is" vs "There are" — exam sentences often put a list after the verb: "There IS a pen and two books on the table" is technically acceptable when the first item listed is singular, but "There ARE two books and a pen" agrees with the plural nearest item; both versions appear in exams
  • The "one of those who" trap: "He is one of those students who work hard" (plural — many students work hard) vs "He is the only one who works hard" (singular — just him); the presence or absence of "only" changes everything
  • Collective nouns in formal exam contexts almost always want the singular verb — students overthink the "individuals acting separately" exception and apply it where it doesn't belong
  • "None" is one of the most debated words in grammar; in competitive exam MCQs, "none" followed by a plural noun almost always expects a plural verb in practice ("None of the answers are correct"), even though strict grammar allows singular — know what your specific exam prefers
  • Titles with plural-looking words ("The Forty Rules of Love IS a novel") catch students every time — the title is one unit regardless of the words inside it
  • Percentages and fractions: students forget to check the noun after "of" and default to singular — "75% of the students ARE" requires the plural because "students" is plural

Cheat Sheet / Quick Revision

  • Collective nouns: acting as one unit → singular; acting as individuals → plural; in MCQ exams, default to singular
  • Indefinite pronouns: each/every/one/anyone/everyone/no one → always singular; both/few/many/several → always plural; all/some/none/most → depends on the noun after "of"
  • And: almost always plural; exception: one unified concept → singular ("fish and chips IS")
  • Or / Nor: verb agrees with the nearest (second) subject — ignore the first
  • Either…or / Neither…nor: same as or/nor — second subject wins
  • Inverted sentences: "There" and "Here" are never the subject — flip the sentence to find the real subject
  • Intervening phrases: cross out everything between "of / with / along with / as well as" and the verb; what remains is the true subject
  • Relative clause (one of those who): "one of those X who" → plural verb; "the only one who" → singular verb
  • -ics words and diseases: mathematics, physics, economics, news, measles → singular verb
  • Pairs: scissors, trousers, glasses → plural verb
  • Titles, amounts, distances, time spans: one unit → singular verb always
  • Fractions/percentages: agree with the noun after "of"

Wrap-Up

Advanced subject-verb agreement is not about memorising one rule — it's about training yourself to find the true subject no matter how deeply it's buried, inverted, or interrupted. Once you can locate the real subject in any sentence, the correct verb follows automatically.

41
None of the milk in the container _____ spilled during transport.
Hard 1 Mark
Check the noun after 'of' — is it countable plural or uncountable?
A were
B was
C are
D have
42
Some of the students in the hall _____ unaware of the exam schedule change.
Medium 1 Mark
Compare this with 'some of the water' to see how the noun after 'of' changes the verb.
A is
B was
C are
D has
43
Which of the following indefinite pronouns is ALWAYS plural, regardless of context?
Medium 1 Mark
Recall the three categories: always singular, always plural, and context-dependent.
A Each
B Everyone
C Few
D No one
44
Raza and Imran _____ both fully qualified for the senior management position.
Easy 1 Mark
When two subjects are joined by 'and,' the verb is usually plural.
A is
B are
C was
D has
45
Neither the manager nor the employees _____ informed about the sudden policy change.
Medium 1 Mark
Look at the subject directly before the verb, not the first subject mentioned.
A was
B were
C is
D has
46
Neither the employees nor the manager _____ informed about the sudden policy change.
Medium 1 Mark
The verb changes when you swap the order of the two subjects around 'nor'.
A were
B was
C are
D have
47
Bread and butter _____ a common breakfast choice in many households.
Hard 1 Mark
Ask whether the two items together represent one single idea or two separate things.
A are
B is
C were
D have
48
Either the students or the teacher _____ responsible for submitting the report on time.
Medium 1 Mark
Identify which subject sits closest to the verb in the sentence.
A are
B is
C were
D have
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