[American from Massachusetts and then Texas:]Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon May 06, 2019 10:39 am"Tonga are leaving" and "The office are fighting" are both completely ungrammatical for me, as is "The family are gathering". "City are reeling from the loss" is very awkward to me, and is only grammatical at all to me because of the common pattern of sports teams taking the plural (except that the sports teams that take the plural for me have names which are in the plural to begin with).alynnidalar wrote: ↑Mon May 06, 2019 7:34 am"Is" in all cases for me. "Tonga are leaving" and "The office are fighting" are completely ungrammatical for me; "The family are gathering" and "City are reeling from the loss" are both ? awkward but understandable. (only because "city" is a sports team here. If it was a literal city, then "are" would be ungrammatical again)Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon May 06, 2019 1:58 am Quick Quiz, how do you render these? I realize some of these are not the most natural way to phrase these statements, but bear with me.
The Tongolese delegation to the UN storms out of the chamber: "Tonga _ leaving."
Seven family members sit down to dinner: "The family _ gathering."
Manchester United beats City: "City _ reeling from the loss."
People are arguing at their place of business: "The office _ fighting."
(Inland North American English for me)
(Inland North American Engilsh here too)
I concur that "are" is ungrammatical with "Tonga" and "office." "Is" is definitely more preferable to me for "City" than "are," but the latter isn't ungrammatical. Interestingly, "are" sounds perfectly fine to me with "family," though? (Though I think I probably use "is," and I may be overthinking it too much at this point, idk...)