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  1. Affirmative. We use there is to say that something exists or is in a place. There is a bridge in the park. We use there is for singular nouns and there are for plural nouns. There is a restaurant in the station. There are two cafés in the shopping centre. We can say there's instead of there is. We often say this when we speak.

  2. 18 de abr. de 2024 · We use there is for singular and there are for plural. There is one table in the classroom. There are three chairs in the classroom. There is a spider in the bath. There are many people at the bus stop. We also use There is with uncountable nouns: There is milk in the fridge. There is some sugar on the table.

  3. We use there is and there are when we first refer to the existence or presence of someone or something: Theres a letter on your desk. Julia brought it from the mail room. Not: It’s a letter on your desk. There are three Japanese students in my class. There is and theres are both singular forms. We use there’s more commonly in informal speaking:

  4. de English Grammar Today. We use there is and there are when we first refer to the existence or presence of someone or something: Theres a letter on your desk. Julia brought it from the mail room. Not: It’s a letter on your desk. There are three Japanese students in my class.

  5. Se usa "there is" con sustantivos contables en singular y con todos los sustantivos incontables. Se usa "there are" con sustantivos contables en plural. Ejemplos. there is. positive: "There is an egg." negative: "There isnt (is not) time." question: "Is there milk?" there are.

  6. Subject-Verb Agreement: there is, there are. There is a bird in the sky. There are two birds in the sky. The structure of there is/there are is very simple: Notice that normal word order (subject-verb) is reversed or inverted (verb-subject). The word there is not the subject.

  7. 9 de mar. de 2020 · Utilizamos “there is” y “there are” para expresar la existencia de algo, tal y como se hace en español con el verbo “haber” en situaciones como esta: There’s somebody at the door. (Hay alguien a la puerta). También se emplean para preguntar acerca de la existencia de algo, como en: Are there any questions? (¿ [Hay] alguna pregunta?).