In Manhattan SC Chapter 3, it states 'a number of takes plural verb'
In the example 'a number of students are......'
It states that we consider 'the students' as the subject so that's the reason we take the plural verb.
What happens if we have a collective noun 'crowd' which is singular.
A number of the crowd is/are......
Do we take plural verb as stated by the first definition of 'a number of' OR do we consider 'the crowd' as the subject and take singular verb?
Many Thanks
In the example 'a number of students are......'
It states that we consider 'the students' as the subject so that's the reason we take the plural verb.
What happens if we have a collective noun 'crowd' which is singular.
A number of the crowd is/are......
Do we take plural verb as stated by the first definition of 'a number of' OR do we consider 'the crowd' as the subject and take singular verb?
Many Thanks













