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 Post subject: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Sun May 24, 2009 11:16 pm 
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Students


Posts: 13
From page 49, I understand that each or every requires a singular verb form, e.g. "Each of these shirts is pretty", and "They each are great tennis players".
Therefore:

1. Am I right to state that the following sentence is correct: - "Each of them is a great tennis player" and this is wrong: - "Each of them are great tennis players"

2. Applying the same strategy, I don't understand how these two sentences at page 204 are wrong: - "Each company has similar issues" and "Every company has similar issues".

3. I don't understand what it precisely means by "Comparison requires plural" after the right sentence "All companies have similar issues".

Thanks


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 Post subject: Re: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Wed Jul 08, 2009 12:55 pm 
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ManhattanGMAT Staff


Posts: 5789
Location: San Francisco
In your first two examples:
Quote:
e.g. "Each of these shirts is pretty", and "They each are great tennis players".


Only the the first one uses "each" as the subject of the sentence (and therefore takes the singular verb "is"). In your second example, "they" is the subject and the verb is the plural "are."

Quote:
1. Am I right to state that the following sentence is correct: - "Each of them is a great tennis player" and this is wrong: - "Each of them are great tennis players"

Yes, both of these use "each" as the subject, so both should have a singular verb to match.

Quote:
2. Applying the same strategy, I don't understand how these two sentences at page 204 are wrong: - "Each company has similar issues" and "Every company has similar issues".


Just in terms of subject-verb agreement, those sentences are not incorrect. The issue discussed here is an idiomatic construction. If you are going to say that two (or more) things are similar, then you need to construct that as a plural sentence - plural subject and plural verb. "each" implies that there is something distinct / different about each company - you're separating them out - so (idiomatically) it isn't appropriate to separate them out using "each" when what you're actually trying to convey is that they're all the same - they can all be lumped together (in terms of whatever similarity we're talking about).

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Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director of Online Community
ManhattanGMAT


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 Post subject: Re: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 12:06 am 
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Students


Posts: 16
Thanks Stacey!!


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 Post subject: Re: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 4:54 pm 
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ManhattanGMAT Staff


Posts: 5789
Location: San Francisco
you're welcome!

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Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director of Online Community
ManhattanGMAT


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 Post subject: Re: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Thu Dec 03, 2009 11:36 pm 
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Students


Posts: 13
StaceyKoprince wrote:
In your first two examples:
Quote:
e.g. "Each of these shirts is pretty", and "They each are great tennis players".


Only the the first one uses "each" as the subject of the sentence (and therefore takes the singular verb "is"). In your second example, "they" is the subject and the verb is the plural "are."

Quote:
1. Am I right to state that the following sentence is correct: - "Each of them is a great tennis player" and this is wrong: - "Each of them are great tennis players"

Yes, both of these use "each" as the subject, so both should have a singular verb to match.

Quote:
2. Applying the same strategy, I don't understand how these two sentences at page 204 are wrong: - "Each company has similar issues" and "Every company has similar issues".


Just in terms of subject-verb agreement, those sentences are not incorrect. The issue discussed here is an idiomatic construction. If you are going to say that two (or more) things are similar, then you need to construct that as a plural sentence - plural subject and plural verb. "each" implies that there is something distinct / different about each company - you're separating them out - so (idiomatically) it isn't appropriate to separate them out using "each" when what you're actually trying to convey is that they're all the same - they can all be lumped together (in terms of whatever similarity we're talking about).



Thank you, Stacey. In this connection, referring to your valued advice above, in bold fonts, please determine whether the following sentence examples are correct or wrong:

(1) All companies have similar human resource policies.

(2) Each company has different issues.

(3) Every company has its different policies.


Thanks!


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 Post subject: Re: SC - Guide 8 3rd ed: Each and Every: Singular Sensations
 Post Posted: Tue Mar 09, 2010 5:31 pm 
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ManhattanGMAT Staff


Posts: 903
Location: St. Louis, MO
ooisuankim wrote:
Thank you, Stacey. In this connection, referring to your valued advice above, in bold fonts, please determine whether the following sentence examples are correct or wrong:

(1) All companies have similar human resource policies.

(2) Each company has different issues.

(3) Every company has its different policies.

Thanks!

All three examples are correct. ;-)

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Emily Sledge
Instructor
ManhattanGMAT


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