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  1. grammatical number - "neither is" vs. "neither are"? - English Language ...

    In formal usage, it should definitely be is: Neither of these options is available. This is the traditional rule (iirc, Fowler’s discusses this at length). However, in colloquial usage, either option is fine, and are …

  2. Which is correct: The rest of the staff is or are? The rest of my ...

    Oct 7, 2011 · I hope you can enlighten me. I get varying answers in Google and I need to find out which is the correct grammatical structure for these sentences. The rest of the staff is/are on leave at the mo...

  3. "None of us is" vs "None of us are", Which is Correct?

    Jul 18, 2018 · Background We have a motivational poster in our office that says: None of us is as smart as all of us. I think that it's grammatically incorrect, and here is my reasoning: All of the tigers have ...

  4. Why are women called chicks? - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Dec 18, 2013 · Why are women called chicks? Is there a negative connotation, I do assume there are sexist undertones there. Any idea about the etymology or origin of the term? Is it derived, in anyway, …

  5. What's the difference between "well-lighted" and "well-lit"?

    Apr 15, 2011 · Historically, "well-lighted" was overwhelmingly favoured, but it's been in decline for the last 100 years or so, with "well-lit" actually becoming the more common usage (40 years ago in UK, …

  6. Should spaces be used between "<" or ">" and numbers or letters?

    Jul 28, 2017 · The AMA Manual of Style says: Thin spaces should be used before and after the following mathematical symbols: ±, =, <, >, ≤, ≥, +, −, ÷, ×, ·, ≈, ∼, ∩, ∫, Π, Σ, and |. a ± b a = b a + b a − b a ÷ b …

  7. Why do we say "You are" when you is singular instead of "You is"?

    There are two answers to this. The simplest is that "are" is the form of "to be" used for first person plural, third person plural, and both plural and singular in second person (with you). Thus, "are" with a …

  8. "Is there any proof" versus "are there any proofs"

    If you begin the sentence with the singular copula (is) you are expected to make the object agree in number. Breaking down the SO sentence to its essentials, we have: Is there any proofs? This is …

  9. grammar - Doesn't a verb have a syntactic role? - English Language ...

    Jan 27, 2026 · I think the reason English doesn't really have a consistent word for the syntactic role of a verb, as opposed to the part of speech, is because most sentences have one predicate, and those …

  10. "Have to be" or "are to be": difference in meaning?

    Nov 19, 2015 · Given that it is a necessity that both instruments sound true during the show, we could say that the sentence is trying to express the urgency of tuning the instruments. Therefore, it can be …