Hello, I'm a student studying English in Asia.<br/><br/> I need some help! <br/><br/> Here it is:<br/><br/> John and Mary gets up.<br/><br/> Is this sentence grammatically right? <br/><br/> Here's what I think.<br/><br/> seems it has to be like : John and Mary get up.<br/><br/> because John and Mary are two people. there has to be a plural verb, get.<br/><br/> I heard someone says it has to be "gets up"<br/><br/> it goes: when you use a verb get, it becomes an imperative sentence.<br/><br/> therefore the correct sentece is "John and Mary gets up." if you want a statement.<br/><br/> I understand using 'rock and roll', 'supply and demand', 'peanut butter and jelly'<br/><br/> as a singular noun. Will there be any chance that consider Mary and John as a pack like those?<br/><br/> 3-line summary (oops! it's four!)<br/><br/> John and Mary gets up : statement<br/><br/> John and Mary get up : command<br/><br/> John and Mary got up : past tense statement (no doubt about this!)<br/><br/> do these make enough sense?