1. If the subject of a sentence is composed of two or more subtants or pronouns bound by a plural verb and use it. However, if the names suggest an idea or refer to the same thing or the same person, the verb is singular. [5] Spoken French always distinguishes the plural from the second person and the plural from the first person in the formal language of each other and from the rest of the contemporary form in all the verbs of the first conjugation (Infinitive in-er) except Tout. The plural first-person form and the pronoun (us) are now replaced by the pronoun (literally: “one”) and a third person of singular verb in modern French. So we work (formally) on Work. In most of the verbs of other conjugations, each person in the plural can be distinguished between them and singular forms, again, if one uses the traditional plural of the first person. The other endings that appear in written French (i.e. all singular endings and also the third plural person of the Other as the Infinitifs in-er) are often pronounced in the same way, except in the contexts of liaison. Irregular verbs such as being, fair, all and holdings have more pronounced contractual forms than normal verbs. This manual gives you several guidelines to help your subjects and verbs to accept.

A rare type of arrangement that phonologically copies parts of the head instead of agreeing with a grammatical category. [4] For example, in Bainouk: verbs must agree with their subjects, persons and many and sometimes in sex. Articles and adjectives must correspond, in the case, the number and gender, to the underlyings they change. In Hungarian, verbs have a polypersonal concordance, which means that they correspond to more than one of the arguments of the verb: not only its subject, but also its object (accusative). There is a difference between the case where a particular object is present and the case where the object is indeterminate or if there is no object at all. (Adverbs have no influence on the form of the verb.) Examples: Szeretek (I love someone or something indeterminate), szeretem (I love him, she, or her, or her, specifically), szeretlek (I love you); szeret (he loves me, me, you, someone or something indeterminate), szereti (he loves him, her or her especially). Of course, names or pronouns can specify the exact object. In short, there is agreement between a verb and the person and the number of its subject and the specificity of its object (which often refers more or less precisely to the person). Although pronouns are useful in helping authors avoid repetitions, they should be used sparingly to keep the meaning of the sentence clear.