Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
After the Rapture a Grammar Rant
Message
From
27/07/2006 08:59:26
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01139756
Message ID:
01140641
Views:
19
>>>>>>Be thankful you are not limited to watching the news in Greensboro, NC. The channel 12 newscast is ridiculous, and I do not allow my daughter to watch it. However, the newscasters in Raleigh, NC are fairly well-spoken. It amazes me that only 2 hours away by car the language deteriorates to such an extent. (The local news can be rather funny though!)
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>When I travel and watch local news elsewhere, I realize how lucky I am to be here in the big city (well, right next to the big city).
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Philadelphia must be an aberration, then. TV news has become atrocious everywhere else.
>>>
>>>I didn't read it that way. Rather as "our local news are not good, but when I travel and watch them elsewhere, I realize how much worse they are there".
>>
>>"News" is singular. Now if you said "The data are suspect" then I admire that.
>>
>>Worse still, people now refer to "the media" as singular ( "the media is to blame for the ..." or "You've lost data? I think your media {as in "your DISK" FGSakes!} is faulty"). This is when I wish gun laws were far less strict in this country
>
>
>There is a general difference in the use of singular vs. plural in the U.S. and UK. A sports team, for example, is referred to in plural form on your side. ("Manchester United are...."). That is probably technically correct but sounds jarring to American ears, since we always refer to a team as a singular unit.

I think it depends on how the team name is used. "Detroit is in first place." vs "The Red Wings is in first place?" Technically, both correct, but the second way sounds pretty jarring, I'd say.
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform