General Forum
Start a New Topic 
Author
Comment
View Entire Thread
Re: GRAMMAR QUESTION

The trick with sentences that start with Here or There is to remember that those words are not the subject. (They are adverbs.)

So, just for second, put the opening word at the end of the sentence, and it all becomes a little clearer.

Shania's mock exam results are here.

Here's a lesson on subject-verb agreement.

Re: GRAMMAR QUESTION

GM
The trick with sentences that start with Here or There is to remember that those words are not the subject. (They are adverbs.)

So, just for second, put the opening word at the end of the sentence, and it all becomes a little clearer.

Shania's mock exam results are here.

Here's a lesson on subject-verb agreement.



The trick with sentences that start with Here or There is to remember that those words are not the subject. (They are adverbs.)


"There" can also be 'dummy pronoun' where it is most certainly the subject in something like:

"There was a nurse present"

PaulM

Re: GRAMMAR QUESTION


Are you saying "There was nurses present" is correct? I don't think it's helpful to think of it as a pronoun. Also, if you were to expand it to its antecedent, you would be left with an adverb of time or place.

It's an odd fish. That's for certain.




Re: GRAMMAR QUESTION

GM

Are you saying "There was nurses present" is correct? I don't think it's helpful to think of it as a pronoun. Also, if you were to expand it to its antecedent, you would be left with an adverb of time or place.

It's an odd fish. That's for certain.






No, no! You misread my post. All I was saying was that the word "there" is not always an adverb; it can also be a dummy pronoun in examples like the one I gave in which case it is the subject.

Perhaps it was a bit off-topic, but I didn't want anyone to the think that "there" is only an adverb.

Paulm