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Singular or Plural?

Singular or Plural? . We use some nouns only in plural. Trousers shorts pyjamas Jeans tights scissors Glasses/ spectacles You can also use “a pair of” with those words: I need some new trousers or I need a new pair of trousers .

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Singular or Plural?

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  1. Singular or Plural?

  2. We use some nouns only in plural. Trousers shorts pyjamas Jeans tights scissors Glasses/ spectacles You can also use “a pair of” with those words: I need some new trousers or I need a new pair of trousers

  3. We do not often use the plural of person “persons”. Instead we use “people”: He is a nice person. They are nice people. These nouns end in –s but they are not usually plural: Mathematics physics economics athletics gymnastics news Athletics is always my favorite sport. What time is the news on television?

  4. Some singular nouns are often used with a plural verb Government staff team family audience Committee We often think of these things as a number of people (“they”) not as one thing ( “it”). So we often use a plural verb: The government (=they) want to reduce taxes. The staff aren’t happy with their new working conditions. A singular verb ( The government wants ..) is also possible.

  5. Note that we normally use a plural verb with the names of sports team: Scotland are playing France in a football match next week. We always use a plural verb with “the police”: The police have arrested Tom. Are the police well-paid?

  6. Sometimes we use a plural noun with a singular verb. We do this when we talk about a sum of money, a period of time, a distance etc: Five thousand pounds (=it) was stolen in the robbery. ( not were stolen) Three years (=it) is a long time to be without a job. ( not “are”)

  7. We say “a holiday of three weeks” but “a three-week holiday”: I have got a three-week holiday in July. ( not a three-weeks holiday) Here, three-week is used as an adjective before “holiday”. When we use “three-weeks” as an adjective, it loses the s. So we say: A ten-pound note ( not pounds) Two 14-year-old girls A four-week English course A six-hour journey. You can also say “ I’ve got three weeks’ holiday.”

  8. Nouns In English there are: abstract and concrete nouns. An abstract Noun: is a type of noun that refers to something a person cannot physically interact with. It is an aspect, concept, idea, experience, state of being, trait, quality, feeling or other entity that cannot be experienced with the five senses.

  9. Concrete nouns are people, places or things we would experience with our five senses. Tree River Crown Rain Beach Cake

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