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  1. Mar 22, 2016 · "Knows" is the singular, present-tense form of the verb. I think he knows exactly what you mean. However, there are certain sentence structures where "know" will be used with a plural form against a singular subject: How did Jacob know what you were planning? There's no way he could know that.

  2. Who here knows English? Whether you may want to use "speaks English" instead of "knows English" would depend on the context. If you were traveling and wanted to find someone that you could talk to in English, you would prefer "speaks".

  3. "Who knows?" is an example of a rhetorical question, because it is really a statement that does not actually ask for an answer. The consensus is that it's sometimes OK to skip question marks for rhetorical question.

  4. Nov 2, 2014 · I would like to know what does "It's only who knows when I will respond." mean? Is this an idiom? Background: She is pretty much busy with her work lately so she seldom replies to him. She said, "I was pretty busy lately. It's only who knows when I will respond. Sorry about that." ? By the way, the two are still getting to know each other ...

  5. FWIW: there are two rules at work here: (1) for regular verbs, only the third person singular takes the -s form (e.g. he knows); (2) the verb number must agree with the subject number. Since the subject here ("ones") is plural, we use third person plural: " [they] know". – Chappo Hasn't Forgotten. Dec 1, 2018 at 23:23.

  6. 1. It's a rather clunky colloquial usage. If you replace who / God / Christ knows how much / many with a straightforward equivalent, you'll see what a mess it is: Moving stuff around is an unknown number of jobs but the transportation industry employs about three million people. Not a style you'd really want to emulate.

  7. Jun 11, 2020 · Your first example uses the phrase Who knows? correctly. It's a rhetorical question -another way of saying that nobody knows whether people will settle on Mars in ten years. Your second example is not idiomatic in this context. Who is to know is a way of asking rhetorically who will find out.

  8. who knows what and who knows what else are English idiomatic expressions. (I know them from British English, but the citations below suggest they are also common in American English.) who knows what One or more things described with no detail. Our junk drawer has old remotes, instruction manuals, and who knows what else in it.

  9. May 11, 2022 · 0. It is possible, especially in British English, to use a plural verb after a subject which is a collective noun - company, team, group, staff, and, among others, population. the British population do not go in for revolution. the British population do not find it as enticing as we do back home.

  10. Aug 21, 2014 · So, the following are correct -. i) He knows swimming. Swimming is a gerund. We can also use the infinitive form here - to swim. ii) He knows to swim. While we might say "he knows swimming", it is because the word swimming has been transformed by usage into a noun meaning "the sport of swimming".