The verb for agree is "to agree."
No, "agree" is not a preposition. It is a verb used to express consensus or harmony between individuals or groups.
No, "accept" is a verb that means to agree to receive or take something.
In the sentence, the subject must always agree with the verb. This means that the form of the verb changes depending on the subject (e.g. "He walks" vs. "They walk"). Ensuring subject-verb agreement helps maintain clarity in writing.
Most linguists agree on five basic sentence patterns: Subject-Verb (SV), Subject-Verb-Object (SVO), Subject-Verb-Indirect Object-Direct Object (S-V-IO-DO), Subject-Verb-Complement (SVC), and Subject-Verb-Adverbial (SVA).
The verb for agree is "to agree."
The verb of agreement is agree. As in the action "to agree to something".
No, "agree" is not a preposition. It is a verb used to express consensus or harmony between individuals or groups.
Agree is already in verb form. As in "to agree".Other verbs are agrees and agreed. Depending on the context.Some example sentences are:"I agree with you"."He agrees with you"."She agreed with you".
Yes subject and verb should always agree. Look at these examples: The boy likes ice cream. = subject (boy) and verb (likes) agree. The boy next door like ice cream = subject (boy) and verb (like) do not agree. The boy next door likes ice cream = subject (boy) and verb (likes) agree.
yes
yes.
Yes. Always make the verb agree with the subject.
the nouns agree with it because it is a noun
The word agree is a verb. The past tense is agreed.
Yes it does.
It must agree in number with its subject. This means that an -s must be added to the verb if the subject is singular and not if it is plural.