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Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places')



 
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ESL Forum | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms
any one help to correct dissertation grammar | someone or ereryone?
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Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places') #1 (permalink) Tue Mar 11, 2008 17:07 pm   Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places')
 

Hi

I have been hearing native English speakers use this expression both ways

There is a few places you could go

There are a few places you could go

Do i follow the normal rule "are" when the subject is clearly Plural?
Ched133
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Joined: 05 Mar 2008
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Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places') #2 (permalink) Tue Mar 11, 2008 17:17 pm   Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places')
 

The problem is that many native English speakers, when speaking informally, have started using "there is" or "there's" as an inseparable unit, and sometimes they don't change it for the plural when they should. You should follow the normal rule for when the subject is plural, and say, "There are a few places you could go."
Jamie (K)
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Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places') #3 (permalink) Tue Mar 11, 2008 20:33 pm   Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places')
 

thank you

What about the phrase "I have got"
Grammatically speaking it should be "have + past participle" = have gotten

People don't say "i have gotten a friend" and almost always "i have got a friend" is used

1) is it acceptable to use "have got" in formal writing?
2) If i want to blend in an informal setting, when should i use "have got" and when should i use "have gotten"
Ched133
I'm here quite often ;-)


Joined: 05 Mar 2008
Posts: 107

Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places') #4 (permalink) Tue Mar 11, 2008 22:09 pm   Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places')
 

In the US:
"I have got" means "I have".
"I have gotten" means "I have received".

UK English has lost the form "gotten", so they don't use it at all, whether in writing or speaking.
Jamie (K)
I'm a Communicator ;-)


Joined: 24 Feb 2006
Posts: 5332
Location: Detroit, Michigan, USA

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any one help to correct dissertation grammar | someone or ereryone?
ESL Forum | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms Usage of few ('There is a few places' vs 'There are a few places') All times are GMT + 1 Hour
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