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members members members area | WordReference Forums Members' is correct as member's would mean that there is only one member Also, re the correctness or otherwise of your third option, you might want to read this recent thread
Family members help each other. - WordReference Forums Could "members" be omitted and just say "Family help each other" instead? This sounds pretty unlikely to me in American English Perhaps another member can tell you whether it sounds normal in British English
any member any members - WordReference Forums I would like to know if in this announcement it is correct to say any member any members or both are right Will any member any members of security staff please go to check-in-desk 11 Thanks
all members of the staff - WordReference Forums all of the staff members all of the members of the staff all staff members all members of the staff I wrote the 4th sentence and Duolingo (a language learning tool) marked it as wrong That seemed odd to me and I am trying to figure out if the sentence is indeed wrong for some reason or if it is just a flaw in the tool Thanks in advance!
five staff vs five members of staff - WordReference Forums Hi all, I've once been told that "five staff" is BrE and is considered wrong in AmE American English speakers say "five members of staff" instead Is there any truth to this? e g Five staff have been fired (BrE) Five members of staff have been fired (AmE) Many thanks!
Norwegian: endearing terms for all family members Hello! I need your help I'm looking for Norwegian terms of endearment commonly used among family members Mother to son: Mother to daughter: Father
A group who has who have | WordReference Forums If the group is composed of members who collectively individually have ten years of experience I would say "a group whose members have an average of (or collectively have) ten years experience The sentences would be parsed differently, too: We are are (a group [of programers]) that has ten years experience
The team are OR the team is? - WordReference Forums I want to refer to "team" as the team members There is no more sentences regarding it or they I made up the sentence In the absence of further context or information (which you say there is none since you made up the sentence in a vacuum) discussion seems rather limited in utility
Collective nouns - a council lt;is, are gt; - WordReference Forums There's another way to look at this: With collective nouns (like council, staff, etc ) use a singular verb when thinking of the group members as a unit "The council is one of the nation's best " Use a plural verb when thinking of the group members as individuals "The council spent the entire session squabbling among themselves "