1.<u> Every</u> adult and child was willing to wait for hours until the ticket box office opened.
2. At the entrance to the exhibition hall was a <u>crowd</u> of eager merchants.
3. Sara or <u>Mike</u> is opening the sales meeting tomorrow.
4. Either Will or his <u>agents</u> are in the office now.
5. On the shelves were several paint <u>cans</u>.
6. <u>One</u> of the workshop presenters has laryngitis.
7.Our <u>CEO</u>, along with his administrative assistant, has arrived early for the review session.
8. Carlos or the Miranda <u>sisters</u> are helping set up the audiovisual equipment.
9. The <u>government</u> publishes a great deal of printed material.
10.In this corner of our lobby stands a <u>group</u> of statues used in a promotion film.
11. <u>One</u> of my classmates was promoted at work today.
12. Our best <u>friends</u>, along with their mother, are moving to Australia.
13. The <u>family</u> has decided that it is time to have a garage sale.
14. Either lilacs or <u>lilies</u> are going to look beautiful in the arrangement.
15. Not only the oatmeal cookies but also the birthday <u>cake</u> was burned.
Collective nouns, such as <em>government</em>, <em>family</em>, normally take a singular verb in American English. In British English, collective nouns can take plural verbs.