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Florine
English native speakers please~~
Hi~ I have problems with subject-verb agreement...
Which verb is correct/more common in each of the sentences?:
(1) There is/are a number of incidents....
(2) There is/are a variety of activities...
(3) There is/are a lot of people...
You see, it's the same structure that I have problems with. Does it depend on whether the word after "of" is uncountable/singular/plural?
I think I have heard both "is" and "are" versions. But I don't remember exactly.
Thanks in advance!
2016年5月7日 05:51
回答 · 5
1
In your examples, "a number/variety/lot of..." can be replaced with other synonyms such as "several" or "multiple". I'd look at the word which follows "of", and in all cases you have plural nouns, so use "are".
The small issue here is that we often use "there's" in speech, even when the subject is plural. I mean the contracted form, not the full form. Maybe this will become widely accepted decades from now.
2016年5月7日
If the subject is singular - use "is"
For example: There is a Black Bear in the woods (single black bear so use is)
Plural example: There ARE Black Bear(S) in the woods
2016年5月7日
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Florine
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 中国語 (広東語), 中国語 (台湾語), 英語, フランス語
言語学習
英語, フランス語
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