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Jack112 Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

There

I don't get the use of 'there' here. What do these ones mean?

1. There has to be cars here.

2. There have to be cars here.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

"There must be cars here". But I'm more used to the first sentence "there has (got) to be cars here".

  • "There must be cars here".
  • But I'm more used to the first sentence "there has (got) to be cars here".
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2 Answers
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"There must be cars here". But I'm more used to the first sentence "there has (got) to be cars here".
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Jack, there recently was a good and long thread on this very topic of subj.-verb concord with existential 'there' .

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