Id | 2016-09-26 |
---|---|
Title | Collective Nouns and Verb Agreement |
Date | Monday September 26th 2016 |
Url | http://learnersdictionary.com/qa/Collective-Nouns-and-Verb-Agreement |
Question | Do collective nouns need a plural verb? — Ajoy, India |
Answer | A collective noun is a name for a group of people or things such as "family," "class," "pack," "bouquet," "pair," and "flock." Collective nouns usually take a singular verb, because they are singular in construction, but they sometimes take a plural verb. Use a singular verb when the members of the group are acting together as a unit.
Use a plural verb when the members of the group are acting as individuals.
The plural verbs in the second set of examples may sound odd to some native speakers. In cases such as those, when you are unsure of whether to use a singular or plural verb, you can add "members of" before the collective noun, and then use a plural verb because "members" is plural.
I hope this helps. |
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