Are there any apples?
If you want to be grammatically correct, it would be arethere any apples? However, it could be is there any apple pie. You're making me hungry with all this talk about apples! :-)
Apples is a plural noun so you should use a plural 'to be' verb. (are)
Yes, if you were talking about pieces of apple on a plate you could ask "Is there any apple? (left).
Neither, there's no fruit here at all.
Furthermore, 'there' refers to the collective noun, so there isn't a ton of apples here. I would like an apple though, so email me at dimtim3000@hotmail.com and we'll see if we can arrange
If they both weigh a ton - then they have the sameweight.
250 apples
well, assuming an average apple is roughly 150 grams, we can divide a million grams by 150 grams to give 6667 apples.
potatoes, blueberries, strawberries, apples, and a ton of other harty plants
In 2005 apples were roughly $1.80 per pound. Apples had went up considerable in price. Considering there was a time you could purchase a ton of apples for a little more than that price.
A milliliter is a measurement of volume. A ton is not. You might as well ask how many apples are in a minute.
In normal conditions (in Earth's atmosphere, at the same elevation) a ton of apples weighs more than a ton of feathers, because the density of an apple is greater than density of a feather (feathers are mostly hollow inside). Therefore, the Earth's atmosphere has a greater "floating" effect on the feathers, making them weigh less than apples. People who give "both weigh the same" answer ignore the fact that a ton (1000 kg) is the measure of mass, not weight. Let me ask: what weighs more, a ton of rocks or a ton of helium-filled balloons? Guess! ;) Consider also that if you weigh the two commodities in a vacuum then there is no buoyancy factor.
Quite alot. Approximately, the price of six golden-haired talking pencil-flavoured toffee apples.
They eat a ton of stuff like grass or timothy hay, My rabbit surprisingly likes bananas, Apples, Lettuce, their own feces, rabbit pellets.
His first wife was Mary Storer Potter. His second wife was Frances Appleton.The name Potter is funny, because Harry POTTER! Funny, right? And Appleton sounds like Apples ton! Like a ton of apples, get it?
If your in science class it might be weighed in ounces. If your in the store buying an apple, they are weighed in pounds. If you the farmer that grows apples, they weigh them by the ton.
At the grocery store you would almost always buy them by the pound. Wholesalers would probably buy them by the bushel. (A common harvesting practice.) A street vendor would sell them by the unit (so much for each apple). When selling apples to an applesauce or cider factory it would be by the ton.