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  1. #1
    shane is offline Senior Member
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    Default None of you is right

    "None of you is right"
    "None of you are right"

    Are these both acceptable?

    This is what I found on Google:

    "None of you is right" = 13 results
    "None of you are right" = 95 results

    What do you think?

  2. #2
    RonBee's Avatar
    RonBee is offline Moderator
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    Both are acceptable to me, but I'm pretty liberal. :wink:

    I usually think of none as singular, so I would probably say the first one.

    :)

  3. #3
    Red5 is offline Webmaster, UsingEnglish.com
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    And I, in my BE way, would use the second.
    Red5
    Webmaster, UsingEnglish.com

  4. #4
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    RonBee is offline Moderator
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    :wink:

  5. #5
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by RonBee
    Both are acceptable to me, but I'm pretty liberal. :wink:

    I usually think of none as singular, so I would probably say the first one.

    :)
    Interesting background info can be found at: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=none

    Iain

  6. #6
    RonBee's Avatar
    RonBee is offline Moderator
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    Whether none in a sentence should be regarded as either singular or plural depends on context.

    :)

  7. #7
    shane is offline Senior Member
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    Default

    Thanks for your help guys :D

  8. #8
    Tdol is offline Editor, UsingEnglish.com
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    If it is 'almost none' with a plural noun, then a plural verb is used.

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