What is subject-verb or pronoun-antecedent for this sentence:

Not one of our tomato plants are producing any fruit, but the greenbeans are thriving.

There is a grammatical error here. Not ONE is singular so the verb should be "Not one of our tomato plants IS producing any fruit, but the greenbeans are thriving.

The subject is One the verb is.

Sra

P.S. In the second clause "greenbeans" is the subject and the verb is "are."

Sra

To identify the subject-verb or pronoun-antecedent in a sentence, we need to break down the sentence and understand the parts.

In the given sentence, "Not one of our tomato plants are producing any fruit, but the greenbeans are thriving," the subject is "Not one of our tomato plants" and the verb is "are producing." Let's break it down further:

Subject: "Not one of our tomato plants"
Verb: "are producing"

Now, let's analyze the second part of the sentence:

Subject: "the greenbeans"
Verb: "are thriving"

In both parts, the subjects are "Not one of our tomato plants" and "the greenbeans," while the verbs are "are producing" and "are thriving" respectively.

To summarize:
1. Subject-Verb for the first part: "Not one of our tomato plants" - "are producing"
2. Subject-Verb for the second part: "the greenbeans" - "are thriving"