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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

None of these apply or applies

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00We are having an arguement at my office over which of the following is correct;02br
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00None of the provisions of the Family Law Act, 1981 (hereinafter called "the Act of 1981") apply to the property because 02br
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00None of the provisions of the Family Law Act, 1981 (hereinafter called "the Act of 1981") applies to the Property because 02br
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00I asked a freind who has a good english education and here is her answer.02br
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00Well, none can be either plural or singular. The verb agrees with the prepostition of none. In the case above, it should be "apply." The provisions apply....02br
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00Any thoughts,02br
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00Regards,02br
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00Donal02br
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4 Answers
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0It depends on whether the noun that follows 'of' is non-countable (and therefore singular) or countable (which would always be plural in this construction):02br
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00None of the water is ...02br
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00None of the beverages are ...0-
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0 The BBC, the New York Times and the general Google hits tell us this is pretty clear cut: 01b00apply02b00. The reason, IMO, is 01b00proximity to the plural 02b01i00provisions02i00. 02br
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00 Google hits: 02br
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00 5 from bbc.co.uk for "none of these apply"02br
00 0 fro
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01cite10Marius Hancu12cite10The BBC, the New York Times and the general Google hits tell us this is pretty clear cut: 11b10apply12b10. The reason, IMO, is 11b10proximity to the plural 12b11i10provisions12i10. 12br
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10Google hits: 12br
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0The verb used with 'none' can be singular or plural. From what I've read, the singular verb is preferred.0-

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