eva-selanty-eva
New member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2016
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- Russian
- Home Country
- Russian Federation
- Current Location
- Russian Federation
Dear all,
Could you help me and explain how to choose the correct forms of words (singular vs. plural verb, countable vs. uncountable quantifier) in the following context, please?
I’ve been teaching for years, but this sentence appeared to be really tricky for me:
How much sugar and apples goes into this pie?
How much sugar and apples go into this pie?
How many apples and sugar go into this pie?
(All these sound a little awkward to me)
(Then, the variants that seem by far more inadequate)
How much apples and sugar goes into this pie?
How many apples and sugar goes into this pie?
How many sugar and apples go into this pie?
(Or should I better say something of a kind, to be on the safe side)
How many apples and how much sugar goes into this pie?
How much sugar and how many apples go into this pie?
Thank you very much for your expert opinion!
Could you help me and explain how to choose the correct forms of words (singular vs. plural verb, countable vs. uncountable quantifier) in the following context, please?
I’ve been teaching for years, but this sentence appeared to be really tricky for me:
How much sugar and apples goes into this pie?
How much sugar and apples go into this pie?
How many apples and sugar go into this pie?
(All these sound a little awkward to me)
(Then, the variants that seem by far more inadequate)
How much apples and sugar goes into this pie?
How many apples and sugar goes into this pie?
How many sugar and apples go into this pie?
(Or should I better say something of a kind, to be on the safe side)
How many apples and how much sugar goes into this pie?
How much sugar and how many apples go into this pie?
Thank you very much for your expert opinion!