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A) Students at Carver High School are encouraged to pursue only those extracurricular activities from which stems success in college applications B) success in college applications stems.
I had a doubt regarding subject verb agreement .
Here the students are encouraged to pursue activities which is plural -> Why are we using singular verb stems with this sentence ?
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A) Students at Carver High School are encouraged to pursue only those extracurricular activities from which stems success in college applications B) success in college applications stems.
I had a doubt regarding subject verb agreement .
Here the students are encouraged to pursue activities which is plural -> Why are we using singular verb stems with this sentence ?
Show more
Hi renjana, this is what is called as inverted sentence, wherein the Verb is used before the subject.
The non-inverted sentence is:
Success in college applications stems from extracurricular activities.
Now it is very clear that success is the subject and hence, stems is the correct verb.
p.s. Our book EducationAisle Sentence Correction Nirvana discusses inverted constructs, their application and examples in detail. If you or someone is interested, PM me your email-id; I can mail the corresponding section.
A) Students at Carver High School are encouraged to pursue only those extracurricular activities from which stems success in college applications B) success in college applications stems.
I had a doubt regarding subject verb agreement .
Here the students are encouraged to pursue activities which is plural -> Why are we using singular verb stems with this sentence ?
Show more
One way to figure something like this out is to change the part of the sentence from a modifier, into an independent clause.
For example:
These are the candies which I bought = I bought the candies We visited the town in which I was born = I was born in this town Students are encouraged to pursue activities from which stems success = Success stems from these activities
It sounds really awkward to use the singular, but it's correct because you aren't saying that the activities stem. You're saying that success stems from the activities. In that sentence, 'success' is the subject, and success is singular, so 'stems' is the right verb.
You can tell that 'activities' isn't the subject because there's a 'from' in front of the word 'which', telling you that 'from activities' should be part of the sentence. 'From activities' is a prepositional phrase, so it can't be the subject. 'Success' is the only thing that can be the subject here.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.