Both... As you can...
Make a cake or
She makes the cake all the time...
Makes goes with a singular subject (ie. she, he)
Make goes with a plural subject (ie. Mike, Jan and I will make the cake.)
They make. (plural subject)
You/I make.
He/she makes. (singular subject)
The subject is sound, sound is singular so the verb should be singular. Makes is the singular verb.
The word 'makes' is both a verb (make, makes, making, made) and a noun (make, makes). Example: I hope that mom makes cookies today. (verb) I looked at several makes of cars. (noun)
'To make' is a verb. 'Make' can also be a noun ('What is the make of your new car?') 'Make' can never be an adjective though.
The word 'makes' is both a noun (make, makes) and a verb (make, makes, making, made).Examples:What make of car do you drive? (noun)We make all types of cakes. (verb)The noun forms of the verb to make are maker and the gerund, making.
Subject, verb, punctuation, capittalization, complete thought.
in order to be a correct sentence, it needs a subject and a verb.
The verb 'is' is correct for the singular subject of the sentence: one.
The word makes is a verb. It is the third person singular present tense of the verb make.
The word makes is a verb. It is the third person singular present tense of the verb make.
Yes it is: "makes" is the third-person singular present tense of the verb "to make". Examples: That makes sense. He makes breakfast on weekends. She makes me angry.
-ize makes the verb elasticize which mean to make elastic
No, it is not. It is a verb form or plural noun. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb to make (he, she, it makes). It can be a plural of the noun "make" when referring to types of cars (models and makes).