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What Is the Word There in Grammar

Can you find the subjects in the sentences below? (Remember that subjects tell us whom or what a sentence is about.)

There is no place like home.

There are many leaves on the ground.

Go ahead and take a guess right now. I mean it. Don't keep reading until you've chosen the subjects. Are you ready? Great!

What's the subject of this sentence?

If you guessed there, I'm sorry to say that you're wrong. You may have been tricked by the order of the words in the sentence.

Many of our sentences follow the sentence pattern of Subject +Verb .

The leaves fell .

My dog ate  my homework.

That is partly what might have made you think that thereis thesubject: it comes before the verb. However, in sentences that begin with There is and There are, the subject actually comes after the verb !

There  is no place  like home.

There are  many leaves  on the ground.

Place is the subject in the first sentence. Leaves is the subject in the second sentence. Now we know what the subjects are, but what is the word there ?

Expletives

There often acts as an adverb answering the adverb question Where?  as it does in the following sentence.

I parked my bikethere.

Where did you park your bike? I parked itthere.

But in the sentences that we're looking at,there doesn't tell uswhere. There is simply an extra word that is not grammatically related to the rest of the sentence.

Notice that we don't lose any meaning when we rewrite our sentences without there.

There  is no place  like home. ---> No place is like home.

There  are  many leaves  on the ground. - --> Many leaves are on the ground.

There  is trying to trick you into thinking that it is the subject, but it's not. It's an expletive .In the world of grammar, expletives aren't swear words. They are words that serve a function but don't have any meaning.

By the way, there is an expletive in these sentences, but it's also called a dummy subject.

Diagramming There

Since the wordthere is not grammatically connected to the rest of the sentence, we diagram it on a line floating above the subject in the same way that we diagram interjections and nouns of direct address.

sentence diagram with

There is no place like home.

sentence diagram with

There are many leaves on the ground.

If you've been diagramming for a little while, you might feel strange having the verbs is and are sitting there without anything after them. If you're wondering what's going on, you might be under the misconception that is is always a linking verb. The truth is thatis isn't always a linking verb!

Fun Fact That Has Nothing To Do With Grammar

In the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz , Dorothy's slippers are silver. At the time the movie came out, the movie industry had just begun using its new technicolor process. (Before the movie, everything was in black and white.) In order to show off the amazing color in the film, they made Dorothy's slippers red (ruby) instead of silver!

Writing Connection

You probably already know that people frown upon using too many sentences that are written in the passive voice. Well, people also frown upon overusing expletives at the beginning of sentences. When you start your sentences with expletives, they can become vague and wordy.

Try rewriting the following sentences so that they don't begin with there.

  1. There is a fly in my soup!
  2. There are sixteen candles on my birthday cake.
  3. There were five dogs howling at the moon.
  4. There is a broken pencil in the pencil sharpener.

Possible answers are below.

If you want to teach or learn grammar the easy way, follow our step-by-step program which clearly lays everything out and allows you to move at your own pace. The Get Smart Grammar Program is presented in a logical sequence, so it's not an overwhelming mishmash of information. Just watch the videos and complete your assignments. Before you know it, you'll be a grammar and sentence diagramming pro!

The Get Smart Grammar Program

Answers

  1. A fly is in my soup!
  2. Sixteen candles are on my birthday cake.
  3. Five dogs were howling at the moon.
  4. A broken pencil is in the pencil sharpener.

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What Is the Word There in Grammar

Source: https://www.english-grammar-revolution.com/there-is.html