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Collective Nouns, Company Names, Family Names, Sports Teams

Plural Noun Forms

The plural form of most nouns is created simply by adding the letter s.

· more than one snake = snakes

· more than one ski = skis

· more than one Barrymore = Barrymores

 

Words that end in -ch, x, s or s-like sounds, however, will require an -es for the plural:

· more than one witch = witches

· more than one box = boxes

· more than one gas = gases

· more than one bus = buses

· more than one kiss = kisses

· more than one Jones = Joneses

 

There are several nouns that have irregular plural forms. Plurals formed in this way are sometimes called mutated (or mutating) plurals.

· more than one child = children

· more than one woman = women

· more than one man = men

· more than one person = people

· more than one goose = geese

· more than one mouse = mice

· more than one barracks = barracks

· more than one deer = deer

 

And, finally, there are nouns that maintain their Latin or Greek form in the plural. (See media and data and alumni, below.)

· more than one nucleus = nuclei

· more than one syllabus = syllabi

· more than one focus = foci

· more than one fungus = fungi

· more than one cactus = cacti (cactuses is acceptable)

· more than one thesis = theses

· more than one crisis = crises*

· more than one phenomenon = phenomena

· more than one index = indices (indexes is acceptable)

· more than one appendix = appendices (appendixes is acceptable)

· more than one criterion = criteria

*Note the pronunciation of this word, crises: the second syllable sounds like ease. More than one base in the game of baseball is bases, but more than one basis for an argument, say, is also bases, and then we pronounce the word basease.

 

A handful of nouns appear to be plural in form but take a singular verb:

· The news is bad.

· Gymnastics is fun to watch.

· Economics/mathematics/statistics is said to be difficult. ("Economics" can sometimes be a plural concept, as in "The economics of the situation demand that . . . .")

 

Numerical expressions are usually singular, but can be plural if the individuals within a numerical group are acting individually:

· Fifty thousand dollars is a lot of money.

· One-half of the faculty is retiring this summer.

· One-half of the faculty have doctorates.

· Fifty percent of the students have voted already.

 

And another handful of nouns might seem to be singular in nature but take a plural form and always use a plural verb:

· My pants are torn. (Nowadays you will sometimes see this word as a singular "pant" [meaning one pair of pants]especially in clothing ads, but most writers would regard that as an affectation.)

· Her scissors were stolen.

· The glasses have slipped down his nose again.

 

When a noun names the title of something or is a word being used as a word, it is singular whether the word takes a singular form or not.



· Faces is the name of the new restaurant downtown.

· Okies, which most people regard as a disparaging word, was first used to describe the residents of Oklahoma during the 1930s.

· Chelmsley Brothers is the best moving company in town.

· Postcards is my favorite novel.

· The term Okies was used to describe the residents of Oklahoma during the 1930s. (In this sentence, the word Okies is actually an appositive for the singular subject, "term.")

 

Problem Children

Many careful writers insist that the words data and media are Latin plurals and must, therefore, be used as plural words. The singular Latin forms of these words, however, are seldom used: datum as a single bit of information or medium as a single means of communication. Many authorities nowadays approve sentences like My data is lost. and The media is out to get the President. Even textbooks in computer science are beginning to use "data" as a singular.

 

Special Cases

With words that end in a consonant and a y, you'll need to change the y to an i and add es.

· more than one baby = babies

· more than one gallery = galleries
(Notice the difference between this and galleys, where the final y is not preceded by a consonant.)

· more than one reality = realities
This rule does not apply to proper nouns:

· more than one Kennedy = Kennedys

 

Words that end in o create special problems.

· more than one potato = potatoes

· more than one hero = heroes
. . . however . . .

· more than one memo = memos

· more than one cello = cellos
. . . and for words where another vowel comes before the o . . .

· more than one stereo = stereos

 

Plurals of words that end in -f or -fe usually change the f sound to a v sound and add s or -es.

· more than one knife = knives

· more than one leaf = leaves

· more than one hoof = hooves

· more than one life = lives

· more than one self = selves

· more than one elf = elves

 

There are, however, exceptions:

· more than one dwarf = dwarfs

· more than one roof = roofs

 

Collective Nouns, Company Names, Family Names, Sports Teams

There are, further, so called collective nouns, which are singular when we think of them as groups and plural when we think of the individuals acting within the whole (which happens sometimes, but not often).

audience band class committee crowd dozen family flock group heap herd jury kind lot [the] number public staff team

Thus, if we're talking about eggs, we could say "A dozen is probably not enough." But if we're talking partying with our friends, we could say, "A dozen are coming over this afternoon." The jury delivers its verdict. [But] The jury came in and took their seats. We could say the Tokyo String Quartet is one of the best string ensembles in the world, but we could say the Beatles were some of the most famous singers in history. Generally, band names and musical groups take singular or plural verbs depending on the form of their names: "The Mamas and the Papas were one of the best groups of the 70s" and "Metallica is my favorite band."

Note that "the number" is a singular collective noun. "The number of applicants is steadily increasing." "A number," on the other hand, is a plural form: "There are several students in the lobby. A number are here to see the president."

 

Collective nouns are count nouns which means they, themselves, can be pluralized: a university has several athletic teams and classes. And the immigrant families kept watch over their herds and flocks.

The word following the phrase one of the (as an object of the preposition of) will always be plural.

· One of the reasons we do this is that it rains a lot in spring.

· One of the students in this room is responsible.

Notice, though, that the verb ("is") agrees with one, which is singular, and not with the object of the preposition, which is always plural.

 

When afamily name (a proper noun) is pluralized, we almost always simply add an "s." So we go to visit the Smiths, the Kennedys, the Grays, etc.When a family name ends in s, x, ch, sh, or z, however, we form the plural by added -es, as in the Marches, the Joneses, the Maddoxes, the Bushes, the Rodriguezes. Do not form a family name plural by using an apostrophe; that device is reserved for creating possessive forms.

When a proper noun ends in an "s" with a hard "z" sound, we don't add any ending to form the plural: "The Chambers are coming to dinner" (not the Chamberses); "The Hodges used to live here" (not the Hodgeses). There are exceptions even to this: we say "The Joneses are coming over," and we'd probably write "The Stevenses are coming, too." A modest proposal: women whose last names end in "s" (pronounced "z") should marry and take the names of men whose last names do not end with that sound, and eventually this problem will disappear.

 

The names of companies and other organizations are usually regarded as singular, regardless of their ending: "General Motors has announced its fall lineup of new vehicles." Try to avoid the inconsistency that is almost inevitable when you think of corporate entities as a group of individuals: "General Motors has announced their fall lineup of new vehicles." But note that some inconsistency is acceptable in all but the most formal writing: "Ford has announced its breakup with Firestone Tires. Their cars will no longer use tires built by Firestone." Some writers will use a plural verb when a plural construction such as "Associates" is part of the company's title or when the title consists of a series of names: "Upton, Vernon, and Gridley are moving to new law offices next week" or "Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego & Associates have won all their cases this year." Singular verbs and pronouns would be correct in those sentences, also.

 

The names of sports teams, on the other hand, are treated as plurals, regardless of the form of that name. We would write that "The Yankees have signed a new third baseman" and "The Yankees are a great organization" (even if we're Red Sox fans) and that "For two years in a row, the Utah Jazz have attempted to draft a big man." When we refer to a team by the city in which it resides, however, we use the singular, as in "Dallas has attempted to secure the services of two assistant coaches that Green Bay hopes to keep." (This is decidedly not a British practice. In the UK, the city or country names by which British newspapers refer to soccer teams, for example, are used as plurals — a practice that seems odd and inconsistent to American ears: "A minute's silence will precede the game at Le Stadium today, when Toulouse play Munster, and tomorrow at Lansdowne Road, when Leinster attempt to reach their first European final by beating Perpignan" [report in the online London Times].)

 


Date: 2015-12-24; view: 998


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