Seeking Grammar Police Ruling - Math's
Geoff Bannister
gbannister10 at tiscali.co.uk
Wed Jun 4 19:12:05 UTC 2008
--- In HPFGU-OTChatter at yahoogroups.com, "P. Alexis Nguyen" <alexisnguyen at ...>
wrote:
>
> bboyminn:
> > Oddly, once again, my American Heritage dictionary shows
> >SNIP<
> > but no 'maths'. Though I suspect if I had an Oxford Dictionary
> > things would be different.
Ali:
> Merriam-Webster (online because I don't own English-English
> dictionaries) shows maths, saying that it's (1) chiefly British and
> (2) function is "noun plural," which is in keeping with standard [US]
> English conventions.
Geoff:
I do have A Concise Oxford Dictionary which begins its definition
as:
mathematics n.pl. (usually treated as singular). abstract science of
space and number....
The Reader's Digest word Power Dictionary begins to define the
same as:
mathematics > plural noun (usu. treated as sing.) the field of
knowledge concerned with number, quantity and space....
maths (N. Amer. math) > noun short for MATHEMATICS.
However, I challenge anyone to find a UK English speaker - or
even a US English speaker - who will say "Mathematics are..." And
can anyone put their finger on a singular use as "Mathematic"?
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