Two kinks of paper... Is the predicate singular or plural? Please explain the usage of kind in detail,

Two kinks of paper... Is the predicate singular or plural? Please explain the usage of kind in detail,


The first is the question of "kind / kind of + plural noun". In "practical English Usage" (by MS), it is said that "kind of + plural noun" is a more informal usage. If it is a formal usage, it is best to avoid it



Which of these words are singular and which are plural: anybody.anything.everybody . everything.somebody.something . etc.etc
anybody.anyone.anything
everybody.everyone.everything .
somebody.someone.something
Which of the above words use do or does


anybody.anyone.anything It means anyone, anything, the third person singular
everybody.everyone.everything . refers to everyone, everything, the third person singular
somebody.someone.something The third person singular
All DOS
anybody.anyone.anything It usually appears in interrogative sentences everybody.everyone.everything yes anybody.anyone.anything The form of affirmative sentence



What is the part of speech of somebody? Plural or singular? What is the general addition after it? What is the difference between somebody and someone


Some or no one doesn't mean some body or no body
-The compound pronoun of one has the same function and meaning as the compound pronoun of - body in the second part, but the former is more elegant than the latter
Some body can be plural or singular, but when the compound words (some body, no body, everything, anything, etc.) composed of some, any, every, no are used as subjects, the predicate verbs are all singular, so there is only one form for both the singular and the plural. When the plural is used, it means a whole body, that is, the singular