General Plurals
When we’re writing anything, most plurals are obvious. One man, two men; one table, two tables; one goose, two geese; one moose, two meese… Now wait a minute there. As you can see, sometimes the plural of a noun is not as simple as it seems. Read the following sentences and see if you can figure out which are correct and which are not:
A. Moving out of my apartment, John and Kane, my brother-in-laws, dropped my favorite lamp.
B. All the cannon fired simultaneously at the enemy.
C. Our current cows consist of Jerseyes and Holsteins.
So, how do you think you did?
A. The noun “brother-in-law” is pluralized using the active noun, “brother.” Hence, the sentence shown above is wrong. It should have read: “my brothers-in-law.” The same goes for “editors-in-chief,” “attorneys-at-law,” and “secretaries-general.” However, in casual writing, the shortened version of “mother-in-law,” MIL, is pluralized as MILs. The abbreviation is not pluralized according to the actual word, but the abbreviation.
B. This is a real example of a sentence that I once argued about with a US-based author. I insisted the plural of “cannon” should be “cannons.” It turns out the Oxford Dictionary does accept “cannon” as the plural of cannon. It is archaic (and perhaps used more commonly in UK style), but correct.
C. We are taught in school that any word ending in “y” is pluralized by changing the “y” to “ies.” So you might think the plural of “Jersey” should be “Jersies,” but that doesn’t look right, either. When a noun ends with “ey” instead of just “y,” then the word is pluralized by adding “s” to the end. So the example of “Jerseyes” is incorrect—it should be “Jerseys.”
Caveat—the agriculture and animal breed industries do not pluralize breeds—they would use “Jersey cows,” pluralizing the animal noun.
And back to my initial gaffe – the plural of moose is, of course, moose. I was curious about the plural possessive of moose… While you can have a pile of sheep’s wool, what do you do with a bunch of moose somethings? The Chicago Manual of Style (15th Edition) states “… the possessive of plural nouns (except for a few irregular plurals not ending in s) [is formed] by adding an apostrophe only.” But they had nothing to say specifically about moose. In the general rules, they advise reworking text to avoid awkwardness.
So instead of “a pile of moose’s antlers”, which is not correct because it looks like only one moose’s antlers, you might write “a pile of antlers belonging to moose” or just “a pile of moose antlers,” using “moose” as an adjective and pluralizing the noun “antlers.”
Another time we’ll talk about pluralizing brand names.
Next week we’ll discuss ‘He Said / She Said: Dialogue Tags’
Susan
To see the index and catch up with missed episodes of this series – CLICK HERE
Reblogged this on The Owl Lady.
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Thanks, Viv! 🙂
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Fantastic!
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Just like you, Tess! 😀
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Ha ha. You’re fantastic. Thanks for these.
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Excellent series! 🙂
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I’m glad you’re enjoying it, D.G. 😀
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Thank you Susan 🙂
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Did you know many geese on the ground is a flock but once they are in flight they are a skein and when they form a ‘V’ formation they are a wedge? Just thought I’d mention this frivolous piece of information as we are fast approaching the time when geese will be migrating south for the winter in case anyone wants to use them in their work as a marker for the changing season.
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Yes, they’re already in constant motion in my area—between the river and the harvested cornfields. Plumping up for the long flight back! Although with global warming, they do go as far away as they used to, and in some areas of the U.S. northeast, they don’t migrate anymore. 😦
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Nice article.
additional exercise… what are the plurals of corpus, ovum, quantum (of solace or not), and testis ? 😉
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😈
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Thanks for sharing this. Another day of learning for me.
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You’re welcome, Joel. Thanks for reading! ❤
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You’re welcome . Have a great weekend.
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Reblogged this on Smorgasbord – Variety is the spice of life and commented:
Part five of the series by Susan Uttendorfsky. Editing 101 is essential reading for new writers and those of us who have developed shortcuts over the years. Susan is taking questions… head over and get some answers.
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Many thanks for spreading the message and reminding people to ask questions Sally – Hugs XXX 😀
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Thank you, Sally ❗
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Pleasure as always Susan. x
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Reblogged this on TINA FRISCO and commented:
Susan Uttendorfsky brings us the fifth in her fabulous editing series via our ever-supportive Story Reading Ape. If you sometimes are addled when pluralizing certain nouns, hop over and read this informative article…
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Many thanks for sharing Tina 😀 XXX
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Welcome, Chris ❤
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Thank you for your promo efforts, Tina! 🐻
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Welcome, Susan ❤
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I find editing most difficult task…
this is helpful.. thanks
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You’re not alone, Hemangini… A lot of writers hate self-editing almost as much as they hate marketing!
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