sorkroto
Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2010
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Korean
- Home Country
- South Korea
- Current Location
- United States
It always confuses me when using "there is/are". I thought it would be 'there are', but I could find lots of results with "there is more than one reason" search. :shock:
I'm also confused about the title of one Agatha Christie's book "And then there were none". People normally say "there is no one". Does the verb(is/are) depend on the whole context? Or is there a fixed rule we can use just anytime we use "there".
Thanks in advance :-D :up:
I'm also confused about the title of one Agatha Christie's book "And then there were none". People normally say "there is no one". Does the verb(is/are) depend on the whole context? Or is there a fixed rule we can use just anytime we use "there".
Thanks in advance :-D :up: