- KenanGarrett
- Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2012 7:41 am
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Greetings,
I'm making my way through Aristotle SC Grail, 3rd edition..and I would like someone to explain what seems to be a discrepancy to me.
page 62, 12: A group of students believes that the park should be cleaned. Explanation - The prepositional phrase "of students" makes "group" become the subject. Singular subject "group" requires singular verb "believes."
But then, in the VERY next question, number 13: A majority of citizens are against the bill. ???? Now it says "When majority is used to refer to a group of people (citizens), it requires a plural verb. What the heck? Using the reasoning from number 12, the prepositional phrase "of citizens" should make "majority" the subject. And isn't "majority," although comprised of multiple things, a singular unit? They even admit it's a group of something, and they made "group" singular in the previous question.
Thanks
-Kenan
I'm making my way through Aristotle SC Grail, 3rd edition..and I would like someone to explain what seems to be a discrepancy to me.
page 62, 12: A group of students believes that the park should be cleaned. Explanation - The prepositional phrase "of students" makes "group" become the subject. Singular subject "group" requires singular verb "believes."
But then, in the VERY next question, number 13: A majority of citizens are against the bill. ???? Now it says "When majority is used to refer to a group of people (citizens), it requires a plural verb. What the heck? Using the reasoning from number 12, the prepositional phrase "of citizens" should make "majority" the subject. And isn't "majority," although comprised of multiple things, a singular unit? They even admit it's a group of something, and they made "group" singular in the previous question.
Thanks
-Kenan












