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∙ 12y agoNo, "he or she" is not a pronoun-antecedent match with "anyone." A correct pronoun-antecedent match in this case would be "he or she can leave whenever they choose." Alternatively, using "they" as a gender-neutral singular pronoun is also widely accepted.
The correct spelling is chooses.
"How should the sentence above be rewritten to correct the subject-verb agreement error?"
No, the phrase has a correct pronoun-antecedent agreement. The antecedent "presenters" is plural, and the pronoun "their" is also plural, matching correctly.
The correct spelling is "unanimous." It means fully in agreement or characterized by complete unity of opinion.
The correct grammar would be "Either you or I am wrong." This form matches the subject-verb agreement between "you" and "I."
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to choose" (the past tense is chose).
The correct spelling is chooses.
the correct way:: I realized it was him (leave out the 'whenever")
The correct statement about contract is that a contract is an agreement between a buyer and a seller. A contract can be a written or oral agreement.
For better communication, so your speaking writing 'sounds' correct. Read this. They is happy. They is having a good time. How does this sound to you? These sentences have incorrect subject verb agreement. Correct agreement is: They are happy. They are having a good time.
That is the correct spelling of the word "whenever."
Politics are your least favorite conversation topic. Is this the correct subject verb agreement?
"How should the sentence above be rewritten to correct the subject-verb agreement error?"
For better communication, so your speaking writing 'sounds' correct. Read this. They is happy. They is having a good time. How does this sound to you? These sentences have incorrect subject verb agreement. Correct agreement is: They are happy. They are having a good time.
It is correct.
The sentence "It lacks agreement Possible correct alternatives are He is the one of the men who does the work or He is one of the men who do the work" are not of correct grammar.
Where ARE the scissors.