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British Council
learnenglish.britishcouncil.org › grammar › a1-a2-grammar › using-there-there-are
Using 'there is' and 'there are' | LearnEnglish
April 18, 2023 - Here are some other examples: Round the corner came the car. Beside the house was a small tree. Under the car lay a black and white cat. This kind of inversion has a slightly rhetorical or literary ring to it and is uncommon in everyday speech. As you say, the more common form is to put the prepositional phrase at the end with a dummy subject such as 'there' if necessary.
Discussions

grammatical number - “There’s” or “There are”? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Yes, this actually does happen. I'm not claiming it's grammatical, but people do it. Simply for the reason that you cannot shorten "there are" to "there're." In that case, you can say "there's" when meaning "there are", but this can be used only in spoken or informal English. Examples: More on english.stackexchange.com
🌐 english.stackexchange.com
August 3, 2012
Please show me example sentences with there is and there are.
"Is" is singular and "are" is plural. There is one example. There are two examples.|There is only one way to do this. Are you sure? I think there are many ways to get the same result. The method you employ depends on your preference. Do you want to waste time debating how many methods there ... More on hinative.com
🌐 hinative.com
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April 1, 2020
Are there examples of PhD theses which effectively say “Well, that didn't work”?
If you have a proof that some method can't be used to solve some problem, that's definitely valid. I've seen a couple of these in papers, and in fact published one such result myself. (As a part of a bigger work.) If it's just "well we tried, but didn't get anything", not really. What if you just didn't try hard enough, or overlooked something? You don't really have a concrete mathematical result. Of course there can be exceptions - in particular I've seen a few papers about running a computer analysis to verify some conjecture for the first (some very large N) numbers. It's not a proof or a disproof, but the methods used can be valuable for further research. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/math
233
2886
September 5, 2018
Are there clear examples of the benefits of using Cisco ISE? What problem(s) does it solve?
Do you use windows NPS? ISE is this, on steroids. Want to use 802.1x on wireless? Want to use it on wired connections? Want to push down an ACL to a switch port based on which user is attached? Want to have granular control over which administrators can execute certain commands on your TACACS+ compatible network gear? ISE helps to facilitate all this. Among competing products is Aruba’s clearpass. More on reddit.com
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September 5, 2021
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Ginseng English
ginsengenglish.com › blog › there-is-and-there-are
There is and There are in English Grammar | Ginseng English | Learn English
March 27, 2022 - In English, we use the phrases there is and there are to talk about things around us. We use there is to say that something exists, or that something is in a specific place. Here are some examples:
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K5 Learning
k5learning.com › blog › there-is-or-there-are
There is or There are in Sentences | K5 Learning
There is or There are in Sentences · We use “there is” when the noun in the sentence is singular. For example: There is a tree in our garden. There is a cat under the bed. We also use “there is” for uncountable nouns.
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Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › there
THERE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
4 days ago - Adjective The triangular camp – a parking lot among two other parking lots, train tracks and in the shadow of grain silos next to the Steel Bridge -- is paved, something that the handful of people who live there year-round and run the community gush about. —Molly Harbarger, OregonLive.com, 10 July 2017 See All Example Sentences for there ... They are among the most commonly confused words.
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Collins Dictionary
collinsdictionary.com › dictionary › english › theres
THERE'S definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
5 days ago - We welcome feedback: report an example sentence to the Collins team. Read more… Wherever you go there's history, there's friendliness and there's beauty.
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UNAM
portalacademico.cch.unam.mx › ingles1 › describing-house-belongings › there-is-there-are
There is / There are
May 21, 2020 - What happens if we don't have one or more than two elements in a place or area? There isn't a TV in the bedroom.
Find elsewhere
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Woodward English
woodwardenglish.com › home › to be › there is / there are
There is / There are | Woodward English
January 28, 2025 - There aren’t any pens on the table. (This is a negative sentence) Remember, we use ANY in negative sentences and not SOME. The same happens with uncountable nouns. We use: There isn’t + uncountable noun · There is some milk in the fridge. (an affirmative sentence) There isn’t any juice in the fridge. (a negative sentence) Remember, we use ANY in negative sentences and not SOME. Let’s see some more examples with uncountable nouns:
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Mango Languages
mangolanguages.com › resources › learn › grammar › english › how-to-use-there-is-sentences-in-english
How to use ‘there is’ sentences in English?
September 23, 2025 - Let’s look at some examples! To say that just one thing exists, we use there + singular verb (is, was, has been, ...) + singular noun. ... There is a cat on the sofa. There was a cat on the sofa. There has been a cat on the sofa.
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Quora
quora.com › What-are-some-examples-of-when-there-is-and-there-are-can-be-used-interchangeably
What are some examples of when “there is” and “there are” can be used interchangeably? - Quora
Answer: There is (singular) There is a dog. There is a collection of deserts available. There is an issue with the new irrigation system. There is proof that vaccines are effective against Covid.
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Quick and Dirty Tips
quickanddirtytips.com › home › expletive sentences: should you start with ‘there is’ or ‘there are’?
Is it bad to start sentences with "there are"?
February 19, 2024 - There are many people who wrote a letter to the editor,” can become “Many people wrote a letter to the editor.” “There are a few things I need to do today,” can become “I need to do a few things today.” · Another problem with ...
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Quora
quora.com › Is-it-correct-to-use-therere-for-there-are
Is it correct to use 'there're' for 'there are'? - Quora
Answer (1 of 12): Why would you want to? In speech, "there are" is nearly always pronounced "there're" anyway. The only exception would be if you particularly wanted to emphasise the word "are", for example "You said I was wrong to talk about there being three horses in the field, but there are ...
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Possibly Related:

  • “There are so many” vs. “There is so many”
  • There is/are one or several apple/~s?
  • “Is there” versus “Are there”
  • “There is/are more than one”. What's the difference?
  • Should I say “there is a handful of…” or “there are a handful of…”?
  • Is “there're” (similar to “there's”) a correct contraction?
  • Which is correct: “There are not any employees” vs. “there is not any employee”
  • How to choose verb after “There” in beginning of sentence?
  • Consistency of “There is the same number of elements in… as there are in…”
  • “A lot of ideas” is or are?
  • Why use “is” in this sentence: “Here is your umbrella and your coat”

Neither of your sentences sounds immaculately grammatical to me, especially the second one. You’re right that people do say these things, sometimes. Here’s why.

First of all, a lot of X takes the number of X, because it can be used on both count nouns and mass nouns:

  • A lot of our farmers are suffering from the drought.
    There are a lot of farmers suffering from the drought.

  • A lot of the trouble comes from the lack of rain.
    There’s a lot of trouble from the lack of rain.

Sometimes you can start of your a lot of thinking it singular or plural before you finish it off, so that will stick in your head and you’ll leave that as the number when you get to the verb without subjecting to careful analysis. This is speech, remember, so people don’t have time to think too much. Text messages and quickly jotted Post-it notes still count as speech, not written languages.

Next, there are legitimate situations where there is introduces a plural and nobody thinks a thing about it:

Oh look, there’s your mom and dad!

Just as they might say

Hey, here comes your mom and dad!

Even though technically, you would use come there in the plural. But here comes is too much of a set phrase, just as there is has become, to always think too much about formal agreement. Furthermore, many speakers will sometimes use there is as a generic existential that doesn’t take number into account.

How many for dinner? Why, there’s just the two of us.
There’s just three things you need to know about women, son.

This may occur in rapid, casual speech in ways that more careful writers may rewrite into the plural as needed when setting things down in formal writing.

How many for dinner? Why, there are just the two of us.
There are just three things you need to know about women, son.

Or not.

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Hang on, slow down here!

There are two different matters being questioned here.

1) Why is "a lot" preceded by is

A lot in this sense describes a certain group of something, which is singular. There are many other similar words, examples:

There is a lot of people here.
There is a team of people working on this project.
There is a group of bystanders watching the accident.

2) Why is "there are" sometimes shortened to "there's"

Yes, this actually does happen. I'm not claiming it's grammatical, but people do it. Simply for the reason that you cannot shorten "there are" to "there're." In that case, you can say "there's" when meaning "there are", but this can be used only in spoken or informal English. Examples:

There are many apples on the table. => There's many apples on the table.

For further reference see Is “there're” (similar to “there's”) a correct contraction?, where the currently accepted answer states:

A huge number of English speakers, even those that are well-educated, use there's universally, regardless of the number of the noun in question, so you will probably not receive any odd looks for saying or writing there's, and if you do, just cite the fact that it can't be incorrect if a majority of people use it.

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QuillBot
quillbot.com › home › there, their, they’re | difference, meaning & examples
There, Their, They’re | Difference, Meaning & Examples
June 18, 2024 - “They are” is frequently contracted (shortened) to they’re, particularly in speech and informal styles of writing. Contractions should generally be avoided in formal writing such as academic writing. Examples: They’re in a sentenceDo you know where they’re from? I like your new shoes. They’re so stylish! ... The word there is used in a variety of different ways.