Thank you for this video . I have watched most of your videos but I haven't watched some of them yet . You have explained this topic really superbly but it's a lot of information to take in and i think it would have been way better if you cut it short a bit . Being an average student it's my opinion . Thank you once again for your efforts . 🙏
Hi, thanks for your positive comments and I take note of your comment to make the lessons shorter. I think you are right. I will try and do that in future. Thanks again!
Hi! Prof, Are these sentences correct? a. Your garden is superb. All of the flowers are beautiful. b. I bought a box of apples thinking it would be cheaper but I was mistaken. most of them were rotten. c. My father is healthy in his seventies but he feels isolated because all of his friends are dead now.
Thank you so much!! The video is very helpful for studying my English test. Although I'm a Korean, I can understand the video well because of your good explanation !!!
Hi Chandan, In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking, people often use plural verbs: None of that surprises me. Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written. Either must be followed by of if we use it before the, these, those or possessives (my, your) with a plural noun. Hope that helps!
"Alpacino has potrayed the most of my characters extremely well;still , the best, according to me , was the godfather." does this mean that he is the only one who performed his characters extremely well or he just performed majority of his characters well.Could you please help to figure out this as i am totally confused at this ?
"Alpacino has portrayed most of my characters extremely well; still , the best, in my opinion , was the godfather." This means that Alpacino has performed the majority of his characters well. Hope that helps!
Hi Ahmed, thanks for the comment. As for your question, "a number of," would be referring to something more generally. For example, " A number of people were injured in the accident." Whereas, if you said, "the number of ..." it would be more specific. For example, " The number of people injured in the accident was small." I hope that helps!
Thanks . I've got another question 🙈 Please answer it .🙏👍 Can I omit the " OF " in these sentences ? Some of people love English . Some people love English . All of the cars are red . All the cars are red . Which of them should I use ? Are the meanings the same ? A Canadian teacher has told me that we can delete " of " , and the meaning is the same . Is he correct? Thanks for teaching us .
Hi hesam, Some of THE people love English . Here we are talking about a specific group of people. Some people love English . Here we are talking about people in general. All of the cars are red . Here we are talking about a specific group of cars. All the cars are red . Here we are talking generally about the cars. Hope that helps! 🙏
Hi Andrea, of course you can ask questions! I ❤️ to help out my students. You could write, “No cities are perfect,” or “None of the cities are perfect.” Depending on the meaning you want to give. The first is a general statement about all cities whereas the second is specific to the cities you have already referred to. Hope that helps! 👍
In the context of the sentence, the most appropriate option to complete it would be: "My father is healthy in his seventies, but he feels isolated because all of his friends are dead." Here’s why: "All of" fits best because it suggests that none of his friends are alive anymore, which would explain his feeling of isolation. The other options might not fit the context as well: "Most of" implies that many but not all of his friends have passed away, which might not fully explain his sense of isolation. "None of" is less natural in this context because it would imply no friends at all, which doesn't align well with the provided choices. "Both of" and "some of" don’t fit because they refer to fewer than all or involve only two items, which isn't suitable for the context of explaining isolation due to the death of friends.
oh you are great thaNk you SO much I 've got a question please :Can we use these expressions in both affirmative and negative sentences especially some of?
Hi Sunkara, How are you! Thank you for your loyal support! much appreciated. By the way, I have made a video on future tenses here.....ua-cam.com/users/edit?o=U&video_id=LAywO9NM7ws
Hi Christy, In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking, people often use plural verbs: None of that surprises me. Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written. None of the products have been tested on animals and all the bottles are recyclable. (informal) Hope that helps!
Hi teacher . Hope you're doing great. I have a question. I'll be very happy if you answer it. The question: Can I use " could " in the result clause of a hypothetical conditional sentence ? Or I have to use " would be able to " ? For example : ( it's the 2ND conditional) If I were a native English speaker , I could / would be able to speak English fluently . Which one is correct ? Please answer it 🙏it is so important to me . Thank you so much . Have a good day .
Hi hesam, If I were a native English speaker , I would be able to speak English fluently . This is the correct sentence. Could doesn't work here. Hope that helps! 🙏
Hi Irvanal, You would use some of with a plural countable noun. For example: some of the apples. But it does not work with a singular countable. So you could not say: some of the apple. Hope that helps!
Hi Franchesca, In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking people often use plural verbs. None of that surprises me. Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written. None of the products have been tested on animals and all the bottles are recyclable. (informal) Hope that helps!
Dear prof, you did say : none of my students are ( informal style) or is ( formal Style ) so both are correct . In case of : not one of my students are , is or both? Thank you. A
Not one of my students is .... is correct and not, "Not one of my students are..." The difference with none is that sometimes none can mean "not one" and is then singular or "not any" and then would require a plural verb. For none, if we mean "none of them" we use a plural verb and if we mean "none of it" we use a singular verb. This is a very tricky area of grammar that even experts in the field disagree on. Hope that helps....
@@oxfordenglishnow I'm also confused when we use forexample : (a) Neither of my sisters is married. (b) Neither of sisters are married. What are differences here??? May really help madam
Hi Faris, You are correct! When we use each of with a plural noun as subject, it’s normally followed by a singular verb: Each of the buildings is surrounded by high metal fencing. Each of the horses has won major international races. Hope that helps! 🙏
Dear Prof in this example, Neither this girl nor that boy has passed HIS examen Neither this girl nor that boy has passed THEIR examen I know the rule : The verb is closed to the subject after "nor" and The pronoun too ?
Hi Andrea, wow.. tricky question! I have done some research and found out that the pronoun should agree with the closer antecedent. For example, Neither Sue or Harry will bring HIS basketball to practice. (From website www.scf.edu)
@@oxfordenglishnowhey sorry my class saw your video for a class and I assumed that the other classes would also see it and that comment was for them to respond
Your garden is superb......the flowers are beautiful.(all of or most of)
Hi, yes I would say if the garden is superb then most of the flowers are beautiful!
You are such a wonderful teacher 🧑🏫. ❤
Wow, thank you!
Thanks miss teacher.
This lesson was important.
Happy to help!
Great lesson! Thank you very much!
My pleasure 😇
very good teacher ❤
Thank you! 😃
Thank you for this video . I have watched most of your videos but I haven't watched some of them yet . You have explained this topic really superbly but it's a lot of information to take in and i think it would have been way better if you cut it short a bit . Being an average student it's my opinion . Thank you once again for your efforts . 🙏
Hi, thanks for your positive comments and I take note of your comment to make the lessons shorter. I think you are right. I will try and do that in future. Thanks again!
Hi! Prof,
Are these sentences correct?
a. Your garden is superb. All of the flowers are beautiful.
b. I bought a box of apples thinking it would be cheaper but I was mistaken.
most of them were rotten.
c. My father is healthy in his seventies but he feels isolated because
all of his friends are dead now.
Hi, yes great sentences! All of them are correct!
Thank you so much!! The video is very helpful for studying my English test. Although I'm a Korean, I can understand the video well because of your good explanation !!!
Glad it helped!
Hi, I am from India. Our teachers have mostly taught us to use none of, either of with singular verbs, is it justified?
Hi Chandan, In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking, people often use plural verbs:
None of that surprises me.
Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written.
Either must be followed by of if we use it before the, these, those or possessives (my, your) with a plural noun.
Hope that helps!
@@oxfordenglishnow Thank you so much with knowing your polite reply. Thanks a lot.
Thank you so much 🙏
You're welcome 😊
Wonderful
Thank you!
Hi teacher, Can I use "no cities are perfect" instead of "no city is perfect". is there any difference?
Hi Nguyen, yes that sounds fine to me!
Thank you very much for this lesson !!!😀😁😃 You helped me ☺😁😀
My pleasure Cathy! 🙏
Wonderfull explanation thank you so much
My pleasure! Thanks for the positive feedback! 🙏
"Alpacino has potrayed the most of my characters extremely well;still , the best, according to me , was the godfather." does this mean that he is the only one who performed his characters extremely well or he just performed majority of his characters well.Could you please help to figure out this as i am totally confused at this ?
"Alpacino has portrayed most of my characters extremely well; still , the best, in my opinion , was the godfather."
This means that Alpacino has performed the majority of his characters well. Hope that helps!
@@oxfordenglishnowThank you for the reply madam.does that also mean he did some flaws in some of his characters ? Right ?
Hi teacher!
it was really understandable vedio lesson for me
Thanks Shabeel ! Appreciate the positive feedback 👍
nice
Thanks
Thank you for making this video, it helps me a lot..please...make more..God bless...
Glad it was helpful!
Best video about English grammatics which I watched.Thank you:)
You're very welcome!
Nc
welcome to my channel!
Excellent video, I have a question for
a number of and the number of, is there a difference between them in the grammatical usage ?
Hi Ahmed, thanks for the comment. As for your question, "a number of,"
would be referring to something more generally. For example, " A number of people were injured in the accident." Whereas, if you said, "the number of ..." it would be more specific. For example, " The number of people injured in the accident was small." I hope that helps!
Thank you^^, hello from Russian university
My pleasure and hi to you at a Russian university! 😀
Thanks .
I've got another question 🙈
Please answer it .🙏👍
Can I omit the " OF " in these sentences ?
Some of people love English .
Some people love English .
All of the cars are red .
All the cars are red .
Which of them should I use ? Are the meanings the same ?
A Canadian teacher has told me that we can delete " of " , and the meaning is the same . Is he correct?
Thanks for teaching us .
Hi hesam,
Some of THE people love English . Here we are talking about a specific group of people.
Some people love English . Here we are talking about people in general.
All of the cars are red . Here we are talking about a specific group of cars.
All the cars are red . Here we are talking generally about the cars.
Hope that helps! 🙏
Dear Prof, I was wondering if I might dare to ask you a question ? Would I have writen no cities are perfect ? Thank you
Hi Andrea, of course you can ask questions! I ❤️ to help out my students. You could write, “No cities are perfect,” or “None of the cities are perfect.” Depending on the meaning you want to give. The first is a general statement about all cities whereas the second is specific to the cities you have already referred to. Hope that helps! 👍
👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️👏👏👏
Thank you!
I do not make these mistakes due to having taught myself. I did think none needs plural. So now we know. Thx. ❣️
Great glad to help ! 👍
My father is healthy in his servetives but he feels isolated because..….......his father are dead.(all of , most of , none of , both of , some of )
In the context of the sentence, the most appropriate option to complete it would be:
"My father is healthy in his seventies, but he feels isolated because all of his friends are dead."
Here’s why:
"All of" fits best because it suggests that none of his friends are alive anymore, which would explain his feeling of isolation.
The other options might not fit the context as well:
"Most of" implies that many but not all of his friends have passed away, which might not fully explain his sense of isolation.
"None of" is less natural in this context because it would imply no friends at all, which doesn't align well with the provided choices.
"Both of" and "some of" don’t fit because they refer to fewer than all or involve only two items, which isn't suitable for the context of explaining isolation due to the death of friends.
Thank u mam
From India - Kerala 🇮🇳
Hi Shakeeb, Hello to India! Welcome to my channel! 🙏
Thank You Very Much ! :)
You're welcome!
❤
Welcome to my channel!
Great lesson mam thank you some much my confusion end
You’re welcome!
Wow...wt a teaching
Thanks, Premini !
I❤it
❤️
oh you are great thaNk you SO much I 've got a question please :Can we use these expressions in both affirmative and negative sentences especially some of?
Hi soy, which expressions are you thinking of ?
So useful video.
Thanks Haider, I’m glad it’s such a useful video for you.👍
thank you so much!
You're welcome!
Make a video on future tenses. You are great. Thanks.
Hi Sunkara, How are you! Thank you for your loyal support! much appreciated. By the way, I have made a video on future tenses here.....ua-cam.com/users/edit?o=U&video_id=LAywO9NM7ws
The le son is good
thank you!
Hi ! Thank you so much .
I've got a question.
Can I say :
(No cities are/is perfect)?
Hi hesam, you would say, "No cities are perfect." Hope that helps! 🙏
Hi Prof, what is the difference in meaning between "None of the paintings is/are modern." Thank you! 😊
Hi Christy,
In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking, people often use plural verbs:
None of that surprises me.
Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written.
None of the products have been tested on animals and all the bottles are recyclable. (informal)
Hope that helps!
You can't say one of the water are full, but i think we could say one of the glass of water is full. Is it correct? Thank you
Hi Mhir, No, you can't say of the water are full, but you can say one of the glassES of water is full.
Hope that helps! 🙏🏻
Hihihu thanks . I think i must review the verb agreement because I'm still confused about it.
Hi teacher . Hope you're doing great.
I have a question.
I'll be very happy if you answer it.
The question:
Can I use " could " in the result clause of a hypothetical conditional sentence ?
Or I have to use " would be able to " ?
For example : ( it's the 2ND conditional)
If I were a native English speaker , I could / would be able to speak English fluently .
Which one is correct ? Please answer it 🙏it is so important to me .
Thank you so much . Have a good day .
Hi hesam,
If I were a native English speaker , I would be able to speak English fluently .
This is the correct sentence. Could doesn't work here.
Hope that helps! 🙏
@@oxfordenglishnow OK, thanks a lot.
Dear prof.
Can we use "some of the" with singular countable noun?
Irvan, from Indonesia.
Hi Irvanal, You would use some of with a plural countable noun. For example: some of the apples. But it does not work with a singular countable. So you could not say: some of the apple. Hope that helps!
@@oxfordenglishnow thank you
I want to your suporrting .
You can support me on Patreon. www.patreon.com/oxfordenglishnow
Thanks a lot
My pleasure! 🙏
Hello!From Bangladesh..
Your video is really very helpful..💜
Thanks! 😊
Good day! I would like to ask why 'none of' can be used with both singular and plural verb.. :)) Thank you!
Hi Franchesca,
In formal styles, we use none of with a singular verb when it is the subject. However, in informal speaking people often use plural verbs.
None of that surprises me.
Indeed, none of his novels is well shaped or well written.
None of the products have been tested on animals and all the bottles are recyclable. (informal)
Hope that helps!
Great
Thanks Nico!
Dear prof,
you did say : none of my students are ( informal style) or is ( formal
Style ) so both are correct . In case of : not one of my students are , is or both? Thank you. A
Not one of my students is .... is correct and not, "Not one of my students are..." The difference with none is that sometimes none can mean "not one" and is then singular or "not any" and then would require a plural verb. For none, if we mean "none of them" we use a plural verb and if we mean "none of it" we use a singular verb. This is a very tricky area of grammar that even experts in the field disagree on. Hope that helps....
Oxford English Now Thank you, I do love British English but sometimes it is so difficult to understand the rules. Hugs. A
@@oxfordenglishnow Prof hi
@@oxfordenglishnow I'm also confused when we use forexample : (a) Neither of my sisters is married. (b) Neither of sisters are married. What are differences here??? May really help madam
Much more confused
Excuse me, i want to ask you something.
Each of + plural nouns + is/was
Is it correct?
Hi Faris,
You are correct! When we use each of with a plural noun as subject, it’s normally followed by a singular verb:
Each of the buildings is surrounded by high metal fencing.
Each of the horses has won major international races.
Hope that helps!
🙏
@@oxfordenglishnow THANK YOUU SO MUCH for answering my question. Have a good day!!!
Help me got all questions Right thanks
Well done, Doreen! 🙏
@@oxfordenglishnow thank u for the help u help mi a lot
Self-evident. I messed my commas by studying too much....
Hi Maria, glad to hear you are studying hard! Keep it up!
Oxford English Now you are pretty cool. I know this stuff . I 'm here for your accent.💕
thank you
You're welcome
At 1:23 you wrote ''blone'' instead of ''blonde''
Hi Eduardo, well spotted... you are right... my mistake... it should read blonde. Thanks for pointing it out. 👍
@@oxfordenglishnow you're welcome, it's a pleasure helping you
Dear Prof in this example,
Neither this girl nor that boy has passed HIS examen
Neither this girl nor that boy has passed THEIR examen
I know the rule : The verb is closed to the subject after "nor" and The pronoun too ?
Hi Andrea, wow.. tricky question! I have done some research and found out that the pronoun should agree with the closer antecedent. For example, Neither Sue or Harry will bring HIS basketball to practice. (From website www.scf.edu)
Oxford English Now Thank you, Dear Prof !!! Love you. A
Lasalle bello?
Hi JD, welcome to my channel! 🙌🏻
@@oxfordenglishnowhey sorry my class saw your video for a class and I assumed that the other classes would also see it and that comment was for them to respond
@@oxfordenglishnow and the school calls lasalle bello from colombia
JD explotion oh, I see. Welcome Lasalle bello!
JD explotion no worries, welcome 🙏🏼
❤
❤️
Great
Thanks MJ
❤
❤️
❤
❤️