Mamun Hossen
a group of us A group of us 'are' going to hold a party tomorrow. (Not is) ---> The expression ‘a group of us’ is followed by a plural verb. #Source: EnglishGrammar dot org But, I can't think so. Why does the expression take a plural verb? Can anyone help me understand this?
2 de ago de 2017 19:22
Respostas · 2
Either is OK. With collective nouns, you can typically use either a singular form to refer to the group, or a plural form to refer to the members of the group. Sometimes you use plural to deliberately emphasise that you are taking about the individuals. Sometimes, (as I suspect is the case here) people use the plural because it seems more natural because of the implicit plural of 'us'.
2 de agosto de 2017
the plural actually comes from "us" rather than "group" - it's the same as if you said "a group of people are going to hold a party" or "we are going to hold a party"
2 de agosto de 2017
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