What exactly are they supposed to be allotting?Hopefully this thread helps people "allot".
What's with people with perfectly good grammar using "prolly" for probably, WTH? When did that ever become acceptable.... must be the extra 2 characters making it too much to type out.
No, it's an acronym...You really go in to correct people, incorrectly, and than maintain your smug superiority.
"Lol" is not a word, either, if you are somehow still out here correcting people.
Wrong, none is a pronoun. The noun and subject of that sentence is these and what the these represents; therefore, the only correct use is are.If the intent of "none" is NOT ONE, then it's correct to write "none of these is that big of a deal". But if "none" is meant to be NOT ANY, then writing "none of these are that big of a deal" would be correct.
So, in other words... it can be plural or singular.
I have a hard time getting HR to provide me with a candidate's actual resume. They just send up the system generated info from when the application was completed. I want to look at how they structured their resume, and ask them about parts of it on the interview. I had an early 20-something year old kid in HR then tell me that for Production positions, there really aren't any skilled applicants, so those people don't even have resumes, they're just minimum wage labor people that don't last. I told him I was a Production person, and did he think I was also unskilled and transient? I wish I could say he was embarrassed, but the whole thing went right over his head.I agree with this, and much of my job is editing narrative reports written by others. Some people have a hard time grasping the idea of ignoring the preposition.
When I post a help wanted ad, I always ask for a cover letter in addition to a resume. I ask for the letter to see if a candidate has a basic understanding of English, but you'd be surprised the number of people that can't follow the simple instruction to provide the cover letter.
Wrong, none is a pronoun. The noun and subject of that sentence is these and what the these represents; therefore, the only correct use is are.
Jaden
None is not a noun, therefore it can't be the subject of the sentence. The topic of the sentence is predicated on a previous sentence giving meaning to what the these represents and what these represents is the subject of the sentence.Verbs support the subject of a sentence. In the following sentences, NONE is the subject (the object of the sentence that the verb supports), and THESE is a demonstrative pronoun representing a specific group of items or things.
"None of these are good." .... Means not ANY/ALL of these things or items ARE good.
"None of these is good." ...Means not ONE of these things or items IS good.
Here's a better example to show the proper relationship between verb and subject:
"ONE of these cues IS worth a lot of money."
ONE is the subject.
Or I could say, "None (not one) of these cues is worth a lot of money."
Or I could say, "None (not all) of these cues are worth a lot of money."
The subject is not THESE, and it's not CUES. It's NONE.
Agreed. Very opinionatedI’m always bothered by “He should of done this.”
Not always.V and F are pronounced differently.
Jeff Livingston
That one is in the list of threads right now. Asking if Azb is censuring posts.
And leave us not forget improperly using mute when moot is intended.
Of course pronouns can be subjects; just sayin’.None is not a noun, therefore it can't be the subject of the sentence. The topic of the sentence is predicated on a previous sentence giving meaning to what the these represents and what these represents is the subject of the sentence.
Jaden
Btw, you proved my point in your example. Lol. If you were right, then none of these cues would be None of this cues in the case of the singular context...
Reading the thread backwards.Wrong, none is a pronoun. The noun and subject of that sentence is these and what the these represents; therefore, the only correct use is are.
Jaden