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English Grammar OLD draft

10. Dummy subject

  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural
  • 2. Articles
  • 3. Capital letters
  • 4. Possessive
  • 5. Present simple, third person
  • 6. Present continuous
  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects
  • 8. Can, could and be able to
  • 9. Must and have to
  • 10. Dummy subject
  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural

  • 2. Articles

  • 3. Capital letters

  • 4. Possessive

  • 5. Present simple, third person

  • 6. Present continuous

  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects

  • 8. Can, could and be able to

  • 9. Must and have to

  • 10. Dummy subject

10. Dummy subject

Sometimes a sentence doesn’t have a proper subject. For example, we can say “it’s snowing” without mentioning the clouds where the snow is coming from. In English, sentences like this have a dummy subject, which can be it or there. The dummy subject it is often encountered when talking about the weather:

It is cold.
It rained.

It is also used when talking about time:

Is it Friday already?
It’s six o’clock.

When saying that something or someone is in a particular place, you can use the dummy subject there:

There is food in the fridge.

Compare to:

The food is in the fridge,

referring to a specific, previously mentioned food.

These sentence structures are very common. Using them correctly makes your English sound more fluent.

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