Click here for AnswerPool.com Home page




Google

    AnswerPool.com  Hop To Forum Categories  News & Reference  Hop To Forums  Words & Language    a lot of

Moderators: Koz
Go
Post
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
  Login/Join 
Diamond
Enthusiast

Posted
We say 'There are many people' and 'There is a group of people'. (In spoken English, 'There's three people.' is OK.)

What about 'There _____ a lot of people'. 'Is' or 'are', and why?
 
Posts: 7630 | Location: Canada | Registered: 06-03-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Platinum
Enthusiast
Posted Hide Post
I consulted Fowler's Modern English Usage (2nd Ed., revised by Gowers) which has this to say:

Under he heading lot: "A l. of people say so", "Lots of paper is wanted", etc. See Number 6(b)."

Under the heading Number 6(b) we find:
quote:
"There are heaps more to say, but I must not tax your space further." The plurals heaps and lots used colloquially for a great amount now always take a singular verb unless a plural noun with of is added: "There is heaps of ammunition", but "There are heaps of cups"; "There is lots to do", but "Lots of people think so."
Thus, acording to Fowler's, your missing word is are.

As for the undisputed authority of this particular reference book, there was an article in The New Yorker November 26, 2001, by Louis Menand lauding it as "one of the fruits of the Oxford English Dictionary." Actually the article was about Fowler, not Fowler's, but never mind that. Menand adds that "Language is a social weapon. Fowler was mostly trying to keep it from blowing up in peoples' hands."
 
Posts: 1917 | Location: U.S. | Registered: 06-03-02Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community  
 

    AnswerPool.com  Hop To Forum Categories  News & Reference  Hop To Forums  Words & Language    a lot of

© 2002-2008 AnswerPool.com



Visit DiscussionPool.com!