masterofyourhouse t1_j33uain wrote
Could it possibly be a regional thing, like how team is plural in British English and singular in American English?
Charming_Scratch_538 t1_j33ug7d wrote
It’s exactly this.
Valyrian_Tinfoil t1_j3518ir wrote
You’re saying there’s no such word as “teams” in Britain’s lexicon of words? Or even vernacular usage?
masterofyourhouse t1_j354yxa wrote
No, what I meant is that in American English you say “our team is winning”, but in British English you say “our team are winning”. The team is a unit made up of multiple people, and British English reflects the “multiple people” part whereas American English reflects the “unit” part.
Valyrian_Tinfoil t1_j3590mu wrote
Ah. Well that’s just stupid. Like when I’m talking about family, which is composed of individual members I love, I don’t say “my family are having dinner tonight”. Why do you think team is treated in such a peculiar and incorrect way?
masterofyourhouse t1_j359fjc wrote
Oh, “my family are” would also be correct in British English! Basically any noun that describes a collective is treated this way. It’s an interesting quirk and definitely sounds odd if you’re not used to it.
AmazingThinkCricket t1_j38p3ig wrote
Least ignorant and arrogant American
Valyrian_Tinfoil t1_j3a4dev wrote
Idgaf. And I do actually take pride in saying what I feel in a time where doing so is so repressed.
I truly feel that it is stupid to use ‘are’ for nouns that are a collective.
So go ahead and insult America, makes you no different than the rest of the world we’re protecting.
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