Click on the correct verb in the parentheses.
Click Submit after each question to see feedback and to record your answer. After you have finished every question, your answers will be submitted to your instructor’s gradebook. You may review your answers by returning to the exercise at any time. (An exercise reports to the gradebook only if your instructor has assigned it.)
For help with this exercise, see Subject-verb agreement.
Example
1 of 10
Before reaching college, nearly everyone already (knows /
A. |
B. |
2 of 10
Fables are short stories that (conveys /
A. |
B. |
3 of 10
Fables nearly always revolve around animals, but animal characters alone (is /
A. |
B. |
4 of 10
Aesop, to whom most familiar fables in Western culture (has /
A. |
B. |
5 of 10
There (is /
A. |
B. |
6 of 10
A crowd of observers almost never (has /
A. |
B. |
7 of 10
The subject matter of Aesop’s fables (is /
A. |
B. |
8 of 10
Since neither foolish behavior nor human failings (seems /
A. |
B. |
9 of 10
Aesop’s fables have always attracted a wide audience; adults and children (enjoys /
A. |
B. |
10 of 10
“The Fox and the Grapes,” for instance, (is /
A. |
B. |