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Learn how to pick the right verb to go with one thing or many things!
Have you ever heard someone say "He hop" or "We hops"? It sounds a little funny, right? That is because nouns (the words that name people, animals, and things) and verbs (the words that tell what someone does) need to work together. When they match, our sentences sound right and everyone can understand us.
People have been learning this rule for a very, very long time. Let's look at how kids and grown-ups have been practicing it!
The big question is: How do we know which verb goes with which noun? Let's find out!
There are a few important ideas you need to know. A singular noun means just ONE (like "a dog" or "he"). A plural noun means MORE THAN ONE (like "dogs" or "they"). The verb in your sentence needs to match!
Here is a picture that shows how one noun and many nouns use different verbs. Look at the animals and read the sentences under them.
Do you see? On the left, we have one frog. The verb is "hops" with an -s at the end. On the right, we have many frogs. The verb is just "hop" β no -s! That is the whole trick.
Let's learn the steps to pick the right verb. It is like following a little recipe!
Here are the steps to follow every time you write a sentence:
Here is a second picture that shows this like a flowchart β a map that helps you decide!
Follow the arrows! Find your noun, check if it is one or many, then pick the right verb. You'll get it right every time!
Let's look at lots of nouns and verbs together so you can see the pattern. Remember: one thing β verb + s and many things β verb alone.
| Noun | One (Singular) | Many (Plural) |
|---|---|---|
| cat / cats | The cat sleeps. | The cats sleep. |
| boy / boys | The boy runs. | The boys run. |
| girl / girls | The girl sings. | The girls sing. |
| dog / dogs | The dog barks. | The dogs bark. |
| bird / birds | The bird flies. | The birds fly. |
| he / they | He eats. | They eat. |
| she / we | She hops. | We hop. |
Do you see the pattern? Every time the noun is one thing, the verb ends in -s. Every time the noun is many things, the verb does NOT end in -s. This works for "he" and "she" too β those are singular. And "we" and "they" are plural.
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Let's pick the right verb for this sentence:
Great job! Now let's try the same word with a plural noun:
Let's look at sentences that are right and sentences that are wrong. This will help you spot mistakes!
| Sentence | Right or Wrong? | Why? |
|---|---|---|
| He runs. | β Right! | "He" is one person β verb gets -s |
| He run. | β Wrong! | "He" is one β needs "runs" |
| They play. | β Right! | "They" is many β no -s on verb |
| They plays. | β Wrong! | "They" is many β should be "play" |
| The dog eats. | β Right! | "The dog" is one β verb gets -s |
| The dogs eats. | β Wrong! | "The dogs" is many β should be "eat" |
You are doing so well! Once you master matching nouns and verbs, you will learn even more cool things. Here is what is coming up for you:
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Next |
|---|---|
| "He hops." / "They hop." | Past tense: "He hopped." / "They hopped." |
| Simple verbs like run, jump, eat | Tricky verbs like "is/are" and "has/have" |
| Short sentences | Longer sentences with more details! |
Did you know that "is" and "are" follow the same rule? "He is happy" (one person). "They are happy" (many people). You will learn about these special verbs soon. For now, you have a great start!
Try these five problems. Read each question and pick the right answer. Then tap "Show Answer" to check!
Today you learned that singular nouns (one person, animal, or thing like "he," "she," "the cat") use verbs that end in -s β like "hops," "runs," and "eats." You also learned that plural nouns (more than one, like "they," "we," "the cats") use verbs without -s β like "hop," "run," and "eat."
The most important thing to remember is this: find your noun first, ask if it is one or many, and then pick the matching verb. When your nouns and verbs match, your sentences sound clear and right. You can use the "one -s is enough" trick β if the noun has -s, the verb doesn't need one, and if the noun doesn't have -s, the verb does! Keep practicing and you will be an amazing writer! π