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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

there is

don't understand the difference between "there are two rooms" and "there's a living room and a bedroom". why in the second case "is" is used? thx
  

Top answer

"There's" is easier to say than "there're", that's all. It is wrong grammatically, but native speakers often don't care very much about that in casual speech.

  • "There's" is easier to say than "there're", that's all.
  • It is wrong grammatically, but native speakers often don't care very much about that in casual speech.
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1 Answers
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"There's" is easier to say than "there're", that's all. It is wrong grammatically, but native speakers often don't care very much about that in casual speech.

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