It's an odd way of writing it though. Do they mean that an agendum is one agenda in the same sense that a bicycle is one bicycles? Not really standard English
sjs wrote: 17 Apr 2024, 10:34pm
Posher kinds of animals, especially when spoken of by posher kinds of people, often lose their plural s. "Oh Giles, let's go and bag some snipe".
Or hunt some orc, as one Aragorn son of Arathorn never said until Hollywood sank its vile gnashers.
But dropping the -s isn't really confined to the posh; a backwoods slaughterophile might well proclaim "Ah'm a-gonna get me some moose" as he took his assault rifle down from the wall with loving care.
sjs wrote: 17 Apr 2024, 10:34pm
Posher kinds of animals, especially when spoken of by posher kinds of people, often lose their plural s. "Oh Giles, let's go and bag some snipe".
Or hunt some orc, as one Aragorn son of Arathorn never said until Hollywood sank its vile gnashers.
But dropping the -s isn't really confined to the posh; a backwoods slaughterophile might well proclaim "Ah'm a-gonna get me some moose" as he took his assault rifle down from the wall with loving care.
Any examples of the same that aren't related to hunting or eating?
sjs wrote: 17 Apr 2024, 10:34pm
Posher kinds of animals, especially when spoken of by posher kinds of people, often lose their plural s. "Oh Giles, let's go and bag some snipe".
Or hunt some orc, as one Aragorn son of Arathorn never said until Hollywood sank its vile gnashers.
But dropping the -s isn't really confined to the posh; a backwoods slaughterophile might well proclaim "Ah'm a-gonna get me some moose" as he took his assault rifle down from the wall with loving care.
Any examples of the same that aren't related to hunting or eating?
Jonathan
Cannon
Tail, ass (saving your presence)
Horse as in regiment of
...
Mick F wrote: 25 Mar 2024, 6:24pm
The other one I was thinking about today, was "agenda". It was being said on R4 this afternoon with a politician chappy.
When I went to meetings ......... and chaired them many many times ............ was we discussed the agendum.
Looking it up earlier due to R4, the modern stuff is "agenda" as the singular, and "agendums" as the plural! :shock: :shock: :shock:
Even the spell-checker on my Mac doesn't like "agendums".
The thread is about "English language."
I cannot understand how this has moved to discussing the gerundive, which might be more appropriate under the diary of N Molesworth beginning Evry fule kno...
I heard a good bit of language mangling today on Talksport radio - 'More grist to their elbow', merging about three different sayings in one.
'Tummy' when used by a GP to an adult also grates with me.