jnelson0612 Wrote:Hi Ashish,
We're happy to help, but why don't you do the first analysis on each of these and then we'll either confirm or help you correct? For us to just tell you won't help you learn as well. :-)
hi Jamie - makes sense :) here i go..
1. a number of students in this class ARE hard workers.=>because, "a number of" generally takes a plural verb. it's similar to "some" (or a fraction of a whole), which is part of the exceptions, SANAM (Some Any None All More/Most), in which the noun that ensues the preposition is the subject deciding the plurality of the verb! (this one gets tricky when the beginning is switched to "the number of" as it breaks the SANAM rule)
2. a number of students in this class ARE hardworking.=> same reason as 1.
3. the majority of the students in this class ARE hard workers.=> because, for words such as "majority," "minority," and "plurality," it depends on the context. to indicate individual parts of the totality, we use a PLURAL verb. to indicate the totality ITSELF, we use a SINGULAR verb. here, we're referring to "the students," which are many individual parts of the "majority."
4. the majority of the students in this class ARE hardworking.=> same reason as 3.
5. a majority of students in this class ARE hard workers.=> same reason as 3.
6. a majority of students in this class ARE hardworking.=> same reason as 3.
now, this is some exercise! but, i'm confused why would "majority" be treated differently than "number?" awaiting your comments..