Tuesday, 21 July 2015

Examples of nouns that are both singular and plural

Top sites by search query "examples of nouns that are both singular and plural"

  http://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/4166-singular-or-plural-verb-for-all-of-multiple-uncountable-nouns/
Supporting your choice of verb agreement is the following line I found from "The Brothers Karamazov" by Dostoyevsky: "Believe that, believe it without doubt; for in that lies all the hope and faith of the saints." I found at least two such English translations (though I am unsure whether they are British or American English) using the verb "lies" and no translations using "lie." Thanks for your advice

  http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/120068/how-can-i-distinguish-between-the-singular-and-plural-of-species
How can I make it clear that I'm referring either to the singular or plural of the word "species" when the singular of this word is the same as its plural? "Species or species" is the only grammatically correct way that I can think of, but it seems redundant and confusing

  http://study.com/academy/lesson/using-uncommon-singular-and-plural-verbs.html
If you think that a plural-sounding noun might actually be singular, ask yourself: Can it be treated as a single entity? If it can, then it's probably a singular noun and therefore requires a singular verb. Why singular? Because while these indefinite pronouns may seem to refer to groups, they actually refer to individual actors - some (one) body or every (one) body or every (individual) thing

  http://forum.wordreference.com/threads/collective-nouns-a-group-of-people-singular-or-plural-verb.185106/
I use the singular because they are not each playing soccer by themselves in a group, each to his own game of soccer! Absurd! Rather, they play soccer together as one group in one game

"(noun) list" ... is (noun) singular or plural? (Linguistics)


  http://www.proz.com/forum/linguistics/245800-noun_list_is_noun_singular_or_plural.html
noun)" are out of the question, what do you see as correct? Singular or plural? I feel that using singular is incorrect, since a list contains more than one item. Even the White House has a "communications director", not a "communication director", suggesting that that the individual concerned is in charge of managing various channels of presidential communication

Plural - Definition and Examples


  http://grammar.about.com/od/pq/g/pluralterm.htm
Similarly for rhinoceros, we have rhinoceroses, rhinoceri (incorrectly), rhinoceros (presumably pronounced differently from the singular) and (an obsolete but correct form) rhinocerotes. Here are some other interesting examples of nouns that have identical singular and plural forms:three aircraft (spacecraft, hovercraft, etc.)six head of cattleLook up aircraft and head (as in of cattle) in a dictionary to see what they say about the origins of these words and the likely reasons for their forms

  http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/45039/is-there-a-term-for-words-that-have-identical-singular-and-plural-forms
"Invariant" doesn't have a special sense for this, it's not linguistic terminology per se, it just happens to be the right word to use for things which don't change. Now for the rest of the list there is a term that's used in grammar and linguistics to cover this and other cases such as nouns with the same form in both masculine and feminine for languages which have grammatical gender: invariant

  http://busyteacher.org/classroom_activities-grammar/nouns/singularplural_nouns-worksheets/
When learning vocabulary, students initially learn the singular form of nouns rather than both the singular and plural forms because this approach makes it easier for them to increase their vocabulary more quickly. Learn from professional teachers and put a bit of your own creativity into it! Creating a Happy, Healthy Classroom: 7 Tips to Make It Work Survival English: 5 Tips on Where to Start with Absolute Beginners More Than Multiple Choice: 5 Out of the Notebook Activities to Check How Well They Read Now Playing: How to Develop Language Learning Activities Based on Popular Movies 10 Questions to Ask before Deciding on English Only vs

Collective Nouns - Definition and Examples


  http://grammar.about.com/od/c/g/collnounterm.htm
Other colourful collectives are:- an exaltation of larks- a muster of peacocks- a rout of wolves- a skulk of foxes(David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. There are persons who pretend to make very nice distinctions as to the cases when these nouns of multitude ought to take the singular, and when they ought to take the plural, Pronoun; but these distinctions are too nice to be of any real use

English teaching worksheets: Singular and plural


  http://www.eslprintables.com/grammar_worksheets/nouns/singular_and_plural/
There are four tasks - Write the plural form of the nouns below, Write the singular form of the nouns below, Rewrite the sentences below in its plural form and Cross out the wrong word. Use coupon code "ESLPR" on registration for discount! Teach Children to Read with Phonics, Worksheets, Games, Videos, Books These are among the best phonics worksheets, games, videos and flash cards you will find online

  http://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/4995/when-to-treat-police-as-a-singular-noun-and-a-plural-noun
I don't know the exact difference! Can anybody provide few examples demonstrating the scenarios when the word police is treated as a singular and a plural noun? Does it depends on the context only to treat it as plural or singular? like consider these examples: The police are blocking off the street where the accident occurred A police officer is getting information from the neighbors

  http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/plurals.htm
For instance, when we want each student to see his or her counselor (and each student is assigned to only one counselor), but we want to avoid that "his or her" construction by pluralizing, do we say "Students must see their counselors" or "Students must see their counselor"? The singular counselor is necesssary to avoid the implication that students have more than one counselor apiece. 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

Noun: Singular and Plural


  http://www.donnayoung.org/english/grammar/noun-plural.htm
lower-case letters numbers symbols abbreviations words being discusses as words Of course if you get a job with a newspaper you need to check their style specifications regarding when one may add apostrophe s to show plural

  http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/is-data-singular-or-plural?page=all
For example,Much of this information is useless because of its lack of specifics.If, however, you want to or need to use data as a plural count noun, you should be able to replace it with the word facts, which is also a plural count noun. A distinguishing feature of count nouns is that they can be modified by a cardinal number (one, two, three, etc.), as in one chair, two mountains, three bottles, etc

  http://study.com/academy/lesson/singular-plural-nouns-definitions-rules-examples.html
The English language loves to have exceptions, though, so the houses in your neighborhood have roofs, not rooves, and your wacky old uncle has crazy beliefs, not believes. So, if you have a secretive, alcoholic octopus drinking wine from a glass behind a bush, and you decide that one of those just isn't enough, you'd have two octopuses drinking from glasses behind bushes

  http://www.edufind.com/english-grammar/plural-nouns/
Examples Singular Plural bus buses wish wishes pitch pitches box boxes A singular noun ending in a consonant and then y makes the plural by dropping the y and adding-ies

  http://www.onlinemathlearning.com/plural-nouns.html
Related Topics: More English Lessons Singular Countable Nouns When we are talking about just one person, animal, place or thing, we use a singular countable noun. Singular Plural leaf leaves wolf wolves calf calves loaf loaves thief thieves With some nouns that end in f or fe, we just add s to form the plural Singular Plural chief chiefs cliff cliffs roof roofs giraffe giraffes With some nouns ending in fe, we change f to v, and add s

No comments:

Post a Comment