REDLAND
Active member
Reading Posh said:"What time shall we meet?"
"About 3-ish"
FFS it's "about 3" or "3-ish" - how f***ing vague is 'about 3-ish'
GET OUT MORE about now-ish !!!
Reading Posh said:"What time shall we meet?"
"About 3-ish"
FFS it's "about 3" or "3-ish" - how f***ing vague is 'about 3-ish'
The Large One said:Afters: Sorry, but Royal Ali is incorrect about the company thing. A company is NOT plural - it is singular. The pronoun for a company is 'it', NOT 'they'. Of course, the people within the organisation are plural.
People - plural
A collection of people: singular
Safeway said:I usually find that the people who constantly harp on about how intelligent they are, actually aren't as clever as they think.
Rather like people who have Pit Bulls as pets, or drive 4x4s, it's about trying to feel superior.
The Large One said:With the exception of when used as a possessive, then its (without the apostrophe) is used.
The Large One said:It's not about how clever one is - it's a comment on the education system that English must be either taught or learned so badly.
afters said:correct, but not what you said!
"company" is of course singular, the name of a company "joe bloggs ltd" can be read as a collective noun and hence plural.
The Large One said:Incorrect, because there is only one company - a singular entity. What that noun refers to is irrelevant.
Rangdo said:So you're saying that the only time you use "it's" is when it is used as a possessive?
The Large One said:No. Did I phrase that badly?
As Safeway correctly pointed out, "it's" is a truncation of "it is". You use "its" (without the apostrophe) for possessive.
For example - "It's a long way to Tipperary.." (truncation - with the apostrophe)
"that was its last chance..." (possessive - without the apostrophe)
No, because BHA is one single entity.RoyalAli said:Surely "Brighton & Hove Albion are trying to get a stadium at Falmer'' means
"The directors, chairman and board, fans and anybody else associated with Brighton & Hove Albion are trying to get a stadium at Falmer?"
bhafc99 said:But I wouldn't say "Arsenal is out of the European Cup", I'd say ""Arsenal are out of the European Cup".
bhafc99 said:With the companies plural/singular thing, you have to pay some attention to accepted conventions. For example, I'd say
"Boots is the UK's biggest high street chemist" not "Boots are the UK's biggest high street chemist"
But I wouldn't say "Arsenal is out of the European Cup", I'd say ""Arsenal are out of the European Cup".
In some areas, grammar is flexible enough to allow for that. In others, such as it's and its, it isn't.
Rangdo said:No, because BHA is one single entity.
RoyalAli said:Yes, because "Brighton is Promoted" would imply the city of Brighton.
Reading Posh said:Imply or infer?
Reading Posh said:But I definitely saw a banner at Cardiff *sponsored by Nationwide* that read "Brighton are promoted"