Got it from a site..

1. Select  the version of the kernel that you wish to boot and type e for 
edit.
2. Select the line that starts with kernel and type e to edit the line.
3. Go to the end of the line and type single as a separate word
4. Back at the GRUB screen, type b to boot into single user mode.



Ayon sa mga chika ni Reynald I. Ngo noong Tuesday 16 July 2002 09:08,
> At 10:34 PM 7/12/02 +0800, Federico Sevilla III wrote:
>
>          Speaking of single user.  I haven't tried doing single user mode
> on GRUB...  anybody?
>
> >I'm assuming you use LILO here.
>
> ---
> Cheers,
>
> Reynald I. Ngo
>
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