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Anonymous Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

When Would You Use "A Majority" instead of "The Majority"?

They went to areas where a majority of people were Democrat.


They went to areas where the majority of people were Democrat.


What's the difference between the two? Are both valid?

  

Top answer

It's a good question. Using " a majority" is usually to emphasize a number, whereas "the majority" is when you want to refer to something as a unit or group, such as with political party membership. It seems either is valid in your case.

  • It's a good question.
  • Using " a majority" is usually to emphasize a number, whereas "the majority" is when you want to refer to something as a unit or group, such as with political party membership.
  • It seems either is valid in your case.
  • com/dictionary/majority
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2 Answers
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It's a good question. Using "a majority" is usually to emphasize a number, whereas "the majority" is when you want to refer to something as a unit or group, such as with political party membership. It seems either is valid in your case.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/majority

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anonymous

They went to areas where a majority of people were Democrats.

They went to areas where the majority of people were Democrats.

As shown. Both 'a' and 'the' are possible. (I'd use 'a' — if knowing that makes any difference to you.)

CJ

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