And as nouns have adjectives in French plural forms. The agreement between the pronodem (or the possessive pre-jectif) and the precursor also requires the choice of the right person. For example, if the precursor is the first person Nov Phrase Maria and I, then a first-person pronoun (us/us/our) is required; However, most nov phrases (the dog, my cats, Jack and Jill, etc.) are the third person and are replaced by a pronodem of a third person (he/she,201st). If an agreement, a contract, a decision, etc. are binding, you have to do what it says. In the French past, for example, the former work of the participants corresponds, in certain circumstances, to the subject or an object (for more details, see compound past). In Russian and most other Slavic languages, the form of the past in sex corresponds to the subject. Class and number are indicated with prefixes (or sometimes their absence) that are not always the same for subtantifs, adjectives and verbs, as the examples illustrate. In November 2014, this agreement was extended for four months, with some additional restrictions for Iran. The predicate corresponds in number to the subject, and if it is copulatory (i.e. it consists of a noun/ajective and a verb that agrees on the number with the subject). For example: A k-nyvek ardek voltak ”Books were interesting” (a: this: ”k-nyv”: book, ”erkes”: interesting, ”voltak”: were): the plural is marked on the theme as well as on the addjectival and the copulatory part of the predicate. Languages cannot have a conventional agreement at all, as in Japanese or Malay; barely one, as in English; a small amount, as in spoken French; a moderate amount, such as in Greek or Latin; or a large quantity, as in Swahili.
There is also a consensus between pronouns and precursors. Examples can be found in English (although English pronouns mainly follow natural sex and not grammatical sex): modern English is not very consistent, although it is present. In Hungarian, verbs have a polypersonal concordance, which means that they correspond to more than one of the arguments of the verb: not only its subject, but also its object (accusative). There is a difference between the case where a particular object is present and the case where the object is indeterminate or if there is no object at all. (Adverbs have no influence on the form of the verb.) Examples: Szeretek (I love someone or something indeterminate), szeretem (I love him, she, or her, or her, specifically), szeretlek (I love you); szeret (he loves me, me, you, someone or something indeterminate), szereti (he loves him, her or her especially). Of course, names or pronouns can specify the exact object. In short, there is agreement between a verb and the person and the number of its subject and the specificity of its object (which often refers more or less precisely to the person). (Consolation word. It is not only French that has male and female names and adjectives: you will find them in all Romance languages (Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian…), as well as in many other languages.