In English, nouns like government or team can be used with singular or plural verbs and pronouns. In the twentieth century, there seems to be a growing trend to use singular concord with most collective nouns. This change is particularly pronounced in American English but can also be found in other national varieties of English. The focus of this chapter is variable concord in Australian and New Zealand English. Data for the study come from the relevant components of the International Corpus of English which, unlike the corpora used in most previous studies, offer information on written as well as spoken usage. Somewhat surprisingly, variability in this area of grammar is not, primarily, a question of the regional variety investigated. Instead, it is mainly due to language-internal factors, such as medium (written vs. spoken usage) or the choice of noun (with some nouns preferring singular, others preferring plural concord).
2023. Semantic Integration in It-Clefts: A Multifactorial Exploration of Agreement Variability in World Englishes. Journal of English Linguistics 51:4 ► pp. 375 ff.
Sommerer, Lotte
2022. Review of Fernández-Pena, Yolanda. 2020. Reconciling Synchrony, Diachrony and Usage in Verb Number Agreement with Complex Collective Subjects. London: Routledge.
ISBN: 978-0- 367-41715-4 https://doi.org/10.4324/9780367815899. Research in Corpus Linguistics 10:2 ► pp. 175 ff.
Wilson, Guyanne
2020. Variability and acceptability in Trinidadian English. World Englishes 39:3 ► pp. 462 ff.
2017. Patterns of verbal agreement with collective nouns taking pluralof-dependents: a corpus-based analysis of syntactic distance. Corpora 12:2 ► pp. 207 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 13 january 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.