English, asked by harwindersingh9155, 6 months ago

the couch and chair i got at the store ___really nice (look/looks/looked)​

Answers

Answered by soniatiwari214
0

Answer:

The word "look" is the one that ought to be used to fill in the blank in the sentence.

Explanation:

  • The rule that must be followed when filling in the blank is known as the subject-verb agreement rule. This indicates that there must be congruence between the singularity or plurality of the subject and the tense of the verb.
  • It is imperative that the plural form of the verb be utilised whenever the conjunction "and" is used to join two or more nouns.
  • Since the word "and" is used to join the two nouns "couch" and "chair" in this context, the plural form of the word "look," which is also "look," is the one that needs to be used.
  • It is essential to keep in mind that the suffix "-s" is used in the singular form of most verbs, whereas the plural form doesn't use it. 

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Answered by aroranishant799
0

Answer:

The couch and chair I got at the store look really nice.

Explanation:

Look could be the right option to fill the blank. Now we will discuss why the other two wouldn't be.

The objects Couch and chair both are together forming plural subject. Now according to the Person Rule , the verbs should be changed.

Singular vs. Plural Verbs :

The verb of a sentence must agree with the subject, according to the principles of subject-verb agreement. In other words, the verb is singular if only one individual is carrying out the action. The verb is plural when more than one person or thing is doing the action. The guidelines for pluralizing singular verbs are as follows:

adding -s or -es to singular verbs (he bakes, she walks, Michele washes)

Don't add a -s or a -es to plural verbs (they bake, we walk, the Hamiltons wash)

Third-person pronouns (he, she, it) and collective nouns like "team" or "family" should be used with singular verbs. Use the basic form of the verb when using the pronouns I and you (I bake, you bake), exactly as you would for the plural verbs.

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