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Stevescotia Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Does a band's name count as a collective noun and follow the rules?

0 I was under the impression that when using a collective noun the singular should be used when the noun is acting as a unit. Does this apply to a musical band's name? eg. "Coldplay is putting on a show tonight" sounds fine but "The Killers is putting on a show tonight" obviously jars because of the plural in the name itself. Can anybody inform me the rules governing this, if indeed there are any. 0-
  

Top answer

0 I'm not certain. 02br 02br 00However, I'd say that band names function in a similar fashion to sports teams. " Likewise, I might say "Coldplay are putting on a show tonight.

  • 0 I'm not certain.
  • 02br 02br 00However, I'd say that band names function in a similar fashion to sports teams.
  • " Likewise, I might say "Coldplay are putting on a show tonight.
  • 02br 02br 00-Andrew0-
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1 Answers
0
0 I'm not certain. 02br
02br
00However, I'd say that band names function in a similar fashion to sports teams. If I were writing about the Utah Jazz, I would say "The Jazz 01font00are02font00 playing tonight." Using that construction I could stay consistent when I replaced "The Jazz" with the pronoun 01font

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