"A couple of" is an indeterminate number, kid was right.
The phrase a couple of, meaning “a smallnumber of; a few; several,” has been in standarduse for centuries, especially with measurementsof time and distance and in referring to amountsof money: They walked a couple of miles in silence. Repairs will probably cost a couple of hundred dollars. The phrase is used in all but themost formal speech and writing. The shortenedphrase a couple, without of ( The gas station is a couple miles from here ), is an Americanism of recent development that occurs chiefly in informal speech or representations of speech,especially when followed by number terms (as a couple dozen eggs ) or units of measurement (as a couple years ago; a couple gallons of gas ). Thisuse of couple (as an adjective or modifier) is stilldisliked by many. Without a following noun, a couple is even more informal: Jack shouldn'tdrive. It's clear he's had a couple. (Here the noundrinks is omitted.) In referring to two people, couple, like manycollective nouns, may take either a singular or a plural verb. Most commonly, it is construed as a plural: The couple were traveling to Texas. Seealso collective noun.
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