I haven't got the requested information yet. I haven't got the information requested yet. She has not been able to get the dump information requested yet. Two agencies provided all information requested. You did not post the requested information. Do not fill out any of the requested information. Thanks in advance.
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We've found lots of information. We've found a lot of information. We have found a lot of information. We have found a great deal of information. We have found much information. This ngram shows a comparison, based on printed sources: Google Books Ngram Viewer
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1. I collected/gathered a lot of information from people around me. 2. I obtained a lot of information from people around me. Which of these suggests that the speaker went out and actively looked for information by asking people questions? The respondents in the original post actively looked for information and obtained it.
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very well thank you, so if I prepare a kind of application form where the applicant should give many personal details, at the foot of the form it is more appropriate writing:
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I've used the structure"search information" or"search for information" for a long time. And the most common sentences are to combine"search [for] information" with"the Internet." Many of my students wrote them, and I thought they were OK. For example, Students used the Internet to search for the information they needed for their report.
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You can give a person many items of information, many data points, many things to consider - but you cannot give them many informations because each item is not"one information." English is not like many Romance languages in that respect. When you write in English you must forget that"information" has a plural in Italian, French, etc.
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In modern non-scientific use, however, it is generally not treated as a plural. Instead, it is treated as a mass noun, similar to a word like information, which takes a singular verb. Sentences such as data was collected over a number of years are now widely accepted in standard English."
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Now, I understood that"There is information." would be the correct grammer base for the word"information." From that grammer base:"There is some information.""There are some information needs.""There are some pieces of information." could be derived! With respect, thanks again. Hope see you later in other thread.
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Information is an uncountable noun. It is singular. M. Moogey Senior Member. New Jersey, USA. USA English
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I thought"information of" was wrong until I saw this, which apparently was written by a British writer: Uncertainty estimates have been created to give users additional information of the quality of these estimates. source: Population estimates for the UK, mid-2019: methods guide - Office for National Statistics Did the writer make a mistake?
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