Learn English – “There are” and “There is”

conjunctionsgrammatical-numbersubject-verb-agreement

  1. "There is a banana and an apple on the floor."

  2. "There are a banana and an apple on the floor."

  3. "There are bananas and an apple on the floor."

  4. "There is a banana and apples on the floor."

I'm confused with the rules of using "is" and "are." Please tell me which one is correct and which is not.

And based on what the verb has to be conjugated? Is it the total amount of the subject mentioned or is it just the first subject?

Best Answer

While a native speaker would probably not blink at speech that said, "There's a banana and an apple on the floor," it's not actually correct. "There is" is used primarily for singular nouns: "There is fruit on the floor." "There is cat fur on my coat." "There is someone at the door."

Meanwhile, "There are" is for plurals. "There are cats on my coat. There are oranges on the floor. There are people at the door."

While "fruit" counts as a singular, once you separate it out into "fruit 1 and fruit 2," it becomes plural, and therefore, uses "There are." AverageGatsby's answer basically gives a good rule of thumb on whether you can use "is" or "are."