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Coffeecustard Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

Singular or plural?

Can anyone give me any pointers on this? Is it correct to say, for example, "the classical and the new case" or "the classical and the new cases"? Assuming there are only two cases, one classical and one new. I'm for using "case". If we used "cases" (with the use of "the" twice) it could also mean "the classical cases and the new cases" whereas there's only one classical case and one new case.
I could use "cases" if the sentence read "the classical and new cases". Only one "the". My coworkers are for using "cases" in both sentences.
I'm a copyeditor so this is really important to my work. I'll be very grateful to anyone who can help or maybe point me in the direction of the right forum for grammar. Thanks a million.
  

Top answer

Hello, coffeecustard. Welcome to the forums These are the right forums! ForumID=12 "]General English grammar questions[/url] I'd use the plural, cases.

  • Hello, coffeecustard.
  • Welcome to the forums These are the right forums!
  • ForumID=12 "]General English grammar questions[/url] I'd use the plural, cases.
  • Suppose you have a blonde girl and a brunette girl.
  • You'd say "the blonde and the brunette girls" because "the blonde and the brunette girl" might mean that the same girl is both blonde and brunette.
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1 Answers
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Hello, coffeecustard. Welcome to the forums Emotion: smile

These are the right forums!
You can also have a look at the Grammar secti

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