A Word, Please: Subjects and verbs should agree, but itâs not always easy
ââGuys are allowed to bring their girlfriend/girlfriends to the event.â Are both OK?â
Thatâs what a user on an English language message board wanted to know a while back. And if youâve never thought about this issue before, prepare for some brain pain.
As you know, subjects and verbs should agree. You walk. He walks. The verb changes form to match the number of the subject. Thatâs agreement. But objects donât agree with subjects. You may walk the dogs if thereâs more than one. Or you may walk the dog if thereâs just one. The subject and verb have no bearing on how many objects you have.
In some sentences, however, that doesnât work out so well.
For example, try the plural object in our sentence above and you get: âGuys are allowed to bring their girlfriends.â That has a nice mathematical balance to it. There are a number of guys, along with a number of girls. So itâs true, yet the meaning isnât clear. With âgirlfriendsâ in the plural, you could be saying that every guy has more than one girlfriend â that each guy should bring all his girlfriends. Surely thatâs not what the writer meant.
The singular object must fit the bill then, right? âGuys are allowed to bring their girlfriend.â But that seems to suggest that all the guys â no matter how many â share just one girlfriend. Doubtful thatâs what the writer meant, either.
Regular readers of this column know that, often, when grammar gives you an either-or, which-is-right scenario, the answer is: both. Itâs rare to come across a which-is-right question in grammar where the answer is: neither. But, technically, thatâs the case here: Neither the plural object nor the singular object captures your exact meaning.
Some grammarians would limit âperuse,â which can be a synonym for âreadâ and âbrowse,â to a more focused definition more akin to âstudy.â
This comes up a lot with sentences that have âeveryoneâ or âeverybodyâ as a subject: âEveryone gets their turn.â But these two pronouns add another layer of confusion because, as Merriam-Websterâs Dictionary of English Usage puts it: ââEveryoneâ and âeverybodyâ are grammatically singular but notionally plural.â That means that even though these words are understood to represent multiple people, they take singular verbs: Everyone is here, not everyone are here. Everyone gets, not everyone get. Their objects can get weird, too. After using the singular verb âgets,â we shift back into the plural with âtheir,â then right back into the singular with âturn.â
Thereâs no consistency, no logic. Our only guide is what sounds right. And notice how wrong it would sound to use a plural object in this sentence: âEveryone gets their turns.â Grammatically, thatâs the same as saying guys bring their âgirlfriends,â yet they get âtheir turnsâ somehow sounds much worse.
The modifier âtheirâ doesnât help, either. If we used âhis or her,â it could help in some situations: âEveryone who agrees should raise his or her handâ makes the singular âhandâ more logical than âEveryone who agrees should raise their hand.â But that only works sometimes.
Certain language critics have tried to make rules to fix these object problems, like Theodore Bernstein, who wrote that âtheirâ referring to âeveryoneâ âis not sanctioned in good writing.â But, like a lot of language rule-makers, Bernstein used the sneaky passive voice to mask the fact that he was the guy who doled out the sanctions âround here, thank you very much. In other words, he was making up a rule based on nothing but his own say-so.
So what should you do when you donât know how many girlfriends plural guys can bring? Well, because neither option is right, neither is wrong, either. Just go with whatever you prefer and take comfort in these words from Barbara Wallraffâs âWord Courtâ: âWhen one is at pains to make clear that the individuals in the subject are to be paired one apiece with the persons, places or things in question, the number of the noun canât be relied on to make the point.â
June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at [email protected].
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