Poll: There ____ tons of evidence to support this view
There ____ tons of evidence to support this view
Poll Stats
This Poll:
- Votes: 1,399
- Comments: 12
- Added: November 2006
Comments:
hi I want to study abroad. can you help me
houston is right. We say "There is lots of sugar in this" not "There ARE lots of sugar in this" ; )
I agree with the first comments. the veb has to be is it because evidence the main object of the sentece not tons
Well, it still sounds correct to use are, because "tons" seems like the noun. Remove "of evidence" from the sentence and you see why it seems right to use "are". Could it be that the noun in this sentence is "tons of evidence", which would therefore make it plural and make "are" the correct word?
Are is teh correct answer because the noun is in plural "tons"
If we change the sentence to the following which answer is correct?
There is / are a great deal of evidence to support this view.
I would think everyone would agree that "is" is the correct choice. This should prove that "tons of" is functioning as a modifier and is, therefore, not the object and can safely be ignored when choosing the correct verb.
"Evidence" is uncountable, isn't it?
Isn't "evidence" uncountable?
I think 'is' should be used for singular, while 'are' for plural as in this case.
Yes, but many native speakers use the singular in cases like this.
Here, the preposition "of" is attached to the end of the noun "tons," meaning that you could also say, "There is evidence - of which there are tons - to support..." and also "There is evidence - of which there is a ton - to support..." Each is correct because the noun just has to match the verb within the sentence and prepositional phrase, respectively. Because the noun in the sentence is evidence, the verb is "is."
houston
The correct response is "is" not "are". "Evidence" is the noun not "tons".