Barney & Clyde by Gene Weingarten; Dan Weingarten & David Clark for September 26, 2013

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    Chalkeye  over 10 years ago

    When you’re listening late at nightYou may think the band are not quite rightBut they are, They just play it like that

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    davidh48  over 10 years ago

    Quite right, actually.

    Americans say “thanks.” Brits say “Thank you very much, indeed”.

    Notice where I put the period relative to the quotation mark, both correct in America.

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    sbchamp  over 10 years ago

    Army am?

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    katzenbooks45  over 10 years ago

    I is Army Strong.

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    finale  over 10 years ago

    Will they arm me in the army?

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    ZBicyclist Premium Member over 10 years ago

    The real point is that either is understandable and clear — and therefore being nitpicky about the rule doesn’t make much sense. Similarly, who and whom — the use of the wrong one doesn’t create confusion.

    For confusion, you have the English use of adjectives ahead of nouns without any modifiers. Consider oatmeal cookies, made with oatmeal, and Girl Scout cookies, not made with Girl Scouts. It would be clearer if we said “cookies with oatmeal” and “cookies from Girl Scouts”.

    On the whole, though, any language where nouns don’t have masculine and feminine isn’t so bad.

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    ChessPirate  over 10 years ago

    Or: “Both are correct.”

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    juliapoole  over 10 years ago

    I’m English and I would never say “the army are strong”!

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    ARodney  over 10 years ago

    I hadn’t come across “the army are strong,” but I have heard “the crowd are restless” on BBC.

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