"Tom Gardner" wrote in message
...
On 16/10/13 11:30, David Hill wrote:
Around £10,000 were stolen from a house
Or should it be
Around £10,000 was stolen from a house.
If you regard the money as individual notes then they "were" stolen but
if you regard it as a single unit of money then it "was" stolen.
It's niggling me.
IMNSHO the sentence is referring to a single unit,
therefore "was" is correct. Besides, it "sounds"
more elegant. If, OTOH, you had written "£10,000
worth of notes" then "were" would be correct.
GrammAr and spulling are they're to help people communicate
and understand each other Beyond that it is a question of
style and elegance.
And no, I'm not prepared to defend that statement.
You don't need to. It is self-evident.
Steve