You should talk to the real grammar pendant.
Oddly enough, football clubs are one of the few anomalies to the standard was/were rule.
Even though a club is singular, and should therefore be 'was', that usage never applies.
You'd never say "Brighton was in the cup final in 1983", you'd say "Brighton were in the cup final…".
But outside football, the opposite still applies. "Microsoft was started by Bill Gates", rather than "Microsoft were started by Bill Gates…"
(Not an answer to the original question, just thought I'd go off on a related tangent…)
Past tense
I was
You were
He, she, it was
We were
You were
They were.
But I was there ?
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I were, weren't I? You wasn'tWas you?
Just watched a tv programme where the questioner asked someone “and you was there?”.
That grated because I instinctively think the correct phrase should have been “you were there”.
However, I now suspect I am wrong if the question is addressed to just one person as in; I was, you was, he was, we were, you were, they were.
Advice please, really petty I know but it is bugging me.
We were shown how to conjugate a verb in Latin. In English, we were shown nothing. That was HGSB in the 70s.
Sum, es, est, summus, estis, sunt.
FFS.
'Lord' Sugar says that all the time... Makes my shit itch. For a clearly intelligent man he speaks like a half-wit.
It's "you were there" if it's in the past tense referring to someone else.
Referring to yourself you'd say "I was there"
"You was there" is wrong....
I like these peculiarities. But you would say "Brighton was the last team to....", wouldn't you? "Brighton were the last team to..." isn't correct. It's the whole collective noun thing isn't it.
Edit:Though, rereading it, both work. Don't they?
Oddly enough, football clubs are one of the few anomalies to the standard was/were rule.
Even though a club is singular, and should therefore be 'was', that usage never applies.
You'd never say "Brighton was in the cup final in 1983", you'd say "Brighton were in the cup final…".
But outside football, the opposite still applies. "Microsoft was started by Bill Gates", rather than "Microsoft were started by Bill Gates…"
(Not an answer to the original question, just thought I'd go off on a related tangent…)
There's only one m in sumus!
Latin Pedantry rules ok!
Latin A-level . Worthing High School 1971!
Referring to the team - they - were ?
Referring to the club - it - was ?
So is the statement referring to the team or the club ?
I dunno..........
We were shown how to conjugate a verb in Latin. In English, we were shown nothing. That was HGSB in the 70s.
Sum, es, est, summus, estis, sunt.
FFS.
Ah, those halcyon days of Ross clinging to the radiator, eyes closed, reciting “amo, amas, amat ..... .............”
How on earth can you call Lord sugar a half-wit?
Grammar is not an indicator of intelligence at all.
We were shown how to conjugate a verb in Latin. In English, we were shown nothing. That was HGSB in the 70s.
Sum, es, est, summus, estis, sunt.
FFS.