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		Grammar and Linguistics > Explanation needed.     
			
		 Explanation needed. 
		
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 Maja O.
 
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							| Explanation needed. 
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							| Hi, 
 I need your help. I sometimes use the page www.elllo.org to give some listening to my students. I found there the dialogue between an  American man and a girl from New Zealand. And I have no explenation for this sentence which is taken from there. The girl says : "There �s a lot of sheep in New Zealand and there �s a lot of cattle as well,..."
 
 Could you help me ? Why does she use there is instead of there are ? Is it grammatically okay? Thank you for all your answers. 
 Have a nice day. |  8 Jan 2011      
					
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 ELOJOLIE274
 
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							| hi, in that case, sheep and cattle refer to a group of animals, but because it is a "group" it �s singular. just like "the police was called..."
 have a nice week-end!
 
 |  8 Jan 2011     
					
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 Ania Z
 
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							| hello, it �s correct.  �sheep � and  �cattle � in both cases are plural nouns. but they refer to �a group of animals�. It�s one of a number of words that don�t change form in the plural. One sheep, two sheep, three sheep...Plural of sheep is sheep as plural of hair is hair.
 
 |  8 Jan 2011     
					
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 ...Alena...
 
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							| Hello,
        
        
 is it correct to say "sheep are white", "fish are in aquarium"? Thanks in advance. |  8 Jan 2011     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| The key expression is  �a lot � (not sheep or cattle) although it often depends whether the following noun is countable or not. You could use either there is or there are with  �a lot of � sheep and cattle but obviously you wouldn �t use there are in a sentence like  �there �s a lot of blues (jazz/rock - music in general) in ----- �s latest album � 
 Actually, we �ve been here lots of times before. Here �s  something which was discussed just yesterday.
 @Alena, not all sheep are white; not all fish live in aquariums (or  �aquaria � for you prescriptivists out there) 
 BTW: I remember being told that  �there �s an awful lot of coffee in Brazil �. Is this still true? |  8 Jan 2011     
					
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 Maja O.
 
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							| Thank you so much for all your answers. They were a great help. 
 
 |  9 Jan 2011     
					
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