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		Ask for help > Plural exercise     
			
		 Plural exercise 
		
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 gportiglioti
 
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							| Plural exercise 
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							| Hello, Dear Friends.   I would like to ask you some help with an exercise from a test my students took.   they have to make a sentence plural. The sentence is:
 AT RISK OF SUDDEN DEATH FROM FAULTY HEART GENE. (it �s a piece of news from BBC)
   would you make all the nouns plural?  AT RISKS OF SUDDEN DEATHS FROM FAULTY HEART GENES.   or would you make it different?   The sentence is isolated from the news, so students shouldn �t take into consideration the article.    Thank you in advance for your help.   Geovane P.              |  2 Mar 2017      
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| I can �t imagine this as a plural sentence, I �m sorry to say.  �At risk of � is a set phrase.  �Death � is a noun, but you are at risk of death or of dying, not deaths - you can �t die more than once.  �Heart � is a noun, but used adjectively. If you were referring to a whole group of people, you would say  �they are at risk of.... � with everything in that phrase in the singular. Maybe you could say  �genes �? I�m not a medic, but a quick google seems to show people are at risk from a faulty gene and not genes.        |  2 Mar 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| I agree completely with Lynne.   What you gave is not a sentence. In fact, it seems to be a headline, since it doesn �t say "a faulty heart gene".    I can �t imagine the purpose of this on a test, unless it is just to show that nothing in it should be changed.   Bruce  |  2 Mar 2017     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| Here is your same sentence as a news headline   
620,000 people in UK �at risk of sudden death from faulty heart gene�(sorry if the size is large - I copied and pasted)   Including it in a test and asking students to make it plural is not easy because headlines do not use grammatically correct English and just changing the sentence to plural still does not make it grammatically correct. Your sentence is not a complete sentence.  To be grammatically correct, this �Guardian� headline should read as: 620,000 people in the UK are at risk of sudden death as a result of faulty heart genes (or, as a result of a faulty heart gene).   Hope this helps.   Cheers   Jayho      |  2 Mar 2017     
					
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 gportiglioti
 
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							| Thank you so much for all your help!! |  5 Mar 2017     
					
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