I want to write that I have handful of somethings. Which of these is the correct form?
- There is a handful of somethings.
- There are a handful of somethings.
Are both correct?
Answer
Rimmer correctly identifies phrases like a handful of . . . and a pack of . . . as premodifying elements in a noun phrase, rather than as the subject of the clause and, for the same reason, Mustafa is right in saying that a number of . . . is followed by a plural verb. However, there is a tendency, particularly in speech, for There’s . . . rather than There are . . . to be used regardless of the number of the noun that follows, as in, for example, There’s a few people who believe my story. In the words of the ‘Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English’ (the stripped-down version of the magisterial Longman Grammar),
‘in conversation . . . the verb is likely to be singular even when the
following notional subject is plural’.
And as ‘The Cambridge Guide to English Usage’ says,
[There’s] seems to be evolving into a fixed phrase, rather like the
French C’est . . . , serving the needs of the ongoing discourse rather than
the grammar of the sentence.
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