I keep hearing from native speakers the phrases like these:
There is a lot of cars (books, hotels)
There is a couple of cars (books, hotels)
There is five (ten, etc.) of cars (books, hotels)
There is a few of cars (books, hotels)
Nevertheless, somebody told me that the phrases like above are incorrect for sure and there should be there are instead of there is.
Whom could I believe?
The bottle of pills is missing. The bottles of water are now cheaper. But couple, in the noun phrase a couple of, is what the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (p349) calls a number-transparent quantificational noun, meaning that it allows the number of the oblique to percolate up to determine the number of the whole NP....'
– Edwin Ashworth May 27 '13 at 06:54