Saturday, October 12, 2013

GRAMMAR POINT: THE MISUSE & PROPER USE OF "THERE'S"




Oh, how the mongrelization of the English language occurs under the very noses of its own native speakers!  

"There's" is the contraction for "there is."  But there's something quite amiss, grammatically, with the contraction "there's" when used to refer to something plural.  It's just plain wrong.  It's bad English, yet it is all-pervasive.  Tune into your radio or TV (at your own risk) or your computer and you will hear media people, and even supposed educated people, making this grammatical error.

"There's lots of things wrong..."
"There's many people who...."
"There's three groups that..."

Wrong, wrong, and wrong again.  Why aren't people contracting "there are" to "there're" when referring to more than one something or other?  Even though it's an acceptable contraction, perhaps "there're" is too growly to say.  If so, then don't make the contraction at all; say it correctly this way:

"There are lots of things wrong..."
"There are many people who...."
"There are three groups that..."

This is one time in the English language when a speaker must think ahead and look to the number of items being referred to in order to determine whether to use "there is" (there's, for something singular) or "there are" (there're, for something plural). Still, for reasons that completely baffle me, this one grammar error has become ubiquitous.  As is very likely the concern of other grammar sticklers, it worries me that it will come to be accepted as a correct alternative simply because so many people are making the error.

Horrific, really.  It grates on the ear -- as bad as hearing someone say "eck setra" instead of the proper Latin, "et cetera" ("and / other things").


2 comments:

Ian McIlvaine said...

Hooray! I have been trying to point this trend out to friends, family and strangers, and they all look at me baffled. Nobody has noticed. We need to form a "there are" militia to guard against this insidious verbal contagion. If we can identify and isolate the verbally contaminated, we might be able to control the outbreak before it is too late.
On the other hand, it has occurred to me that French and Spanish speakers don't have the same problem with "il y a" and "hay", so maybe it isn't worth the excitement?

Unknown said...

I’ve definitely seen the improper use of “there’s” increase and it makes me want to correct people all the time. However, I agree that no one seems to notice anything amiss.