GMAT: the predicate after each of + is singular, so what is plural after each?

GMAT: the predicate after each of + is singular, so what is plural after each?

If we say: each of them + sing. V... each student / Book + sing. V. these two situations will never use plural verbs in grammar! But when each is used as an appositive adverb, the verb uses plural, and the meaning will not change
Each of singular or plural?
Each of the boys gets a book from me.
The boys is plural, but only "every boy" gets "gets" as singular
Like both, each is only used before the plural and can be followed by of + these / those
Each of the students, plus the plural
Plural noun
Each of is followed by a plural noun
Each of is followed by a plural noun, which must be specific, but the central word of the whole phrase is "each", which is regarded as a singular.
E.g. each of the students
Each of the boys has a bike.
Each + singular / plural?
Each + noun singular
How to use the plural form of English quantifiers?
Most of all, our teacher said that if there is no a / an before a quantifier, we should use the plural form. But when doing exercises, I found that some quantifiers do not have a / an before but do not use the plural form. So how to use the singular and plural of quantifiers
Some words are uncountable nouns, without adding a / an, for example, water, news, to express a piece of news, two pieces of news. Furniture is also uncountable nouns. Another situation is that some words have the same form of singular and plural, that is, the singular is its plural or it
When uncountable nouns are modified with plural quantifiers, what is the verb be
Use the plural
Some abstract and material nouns are uncountable when they represent abstract concepts, but countable when they represent concrete things
A young man
The necessity of a relative
Glass a glass a glass, copper a copper coin, tin tin a tin a tin a tin a tin a paper a paper a newspaper, a card
(chopping wood enter a wood means different parts of speech, of course)
If we want to express the concept of "one thing" and change the uncountable into countable, we should add the attribute "a.. Of" before it
Quantity can also express form
a sheet of paper,a lump of sugar,a piece of furniture,a can of orange juice,a bowl of rice,a grain of
rice,a stick of chalk,a burst of applause,a fit of anger,a ray of hope,a stroke of good luck
Two coffees also means a variety of teas
Some quantifiers with countable nouns are still uncountable
a generous amount of
a number of
mountains of
A genus amount of
A number of plus countable
The last uncertainty of countable
1. The difference between amount and number
Amount is usually used with uncountable nouns, such as: a large / genetic amount of money. But when used with most plural nouns, number is more appropriate: a large number of mistakes. But when it comes to large quantities of goods, the shopkeeper had a large amount of oranges in his
1. The difference between amount and number
Amount is usually used with uncountable nouns, such as a large / genetic amount of money. However, when used with most plural nouns, number is more appropriate: a large number of mistakes. But when it comes to large quantities of goods, the shopkeeper had a large amount of oranges in his storeroom should still be used
2.mountains of =a very large amount of。 Therefore, it is the same as "amount" and is usually used with uncountable nouns.
(see Longman contemporary advanced English Dictionary for details)
Which quantifiers (such as many, some) are followed by countable or uncountable nouns "please"
Countable nouns and uncountable nouns
Many and some are followed by countable nouns
English nouns can be divided into countable nouns and uncountable nouns. It is very important for us to judge whether a noun is countable or uncountable, because it involves whether to add an article before it, what kind of article to add, and the proper form of the word in the sentence
So, how to distinguish countable nouns from uncountable nouns?
Generally speaking, countable nouns can be divided into singular and plural. For example, nouns expressing people or things and collective nouns are generally countable. Sometimes, we can try to add a cardinal number word before the word to judge
A boy three boys some boys
A desk 40 desks 40 desks many desks
A film some films
A story two stories
A song some songs
An apple 9 apples 9 apples some apples
Police officer Chinese
Material nouns or abstract nouns are generally uncountable. Uncountable nouns have no difference between singular and plural, for example:
Water ice tea tea meat milk
Age time help help luck work
A few material nouns also have plural forms, but their meanings are different
Glass countable noun glasses
The water of a river or lake
By the way, some material nouns are also countable nouns, but their meanings are different
Material noun countable noun
Glass a glass
A paper; a paper
Wood a wood forest
Gold a gold
Many, some, a (good / great) number of, fee, a good many, many a plus countable
Many, a great deal of, little, a large amount of
Lots of, a lot of, plenty of, quantities of, a quantity of, followed by countable / uncountable nouns
Should one and a half apples & one apple and a half be plural or singular?
Plural,
Look at the plural after the noun
Is the predicate verb singular or plural when one and a half apples is the subject
It's plural
One and a half is the subject, the predicate, the singular or the plural
In the sixth edition of Oxford Advanced English, one and a half can be used as the subject predicate in both singular and plural, but some say that the singular is regarded as a whole. What do you think?
One and a half + plural
One and a half years have passed since I saw him.
I haven't seen him for a year and a half