Not Scooby
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2011
- Messages
- 34
Thanks - I try!
Curiously, I write quite a lot of consultancy reports which contain analysis of data; I'm one of the few people who insists on treating the word "data" as a plural noun (of which "datum" is the singular equivalent) - meaning that I will (e.g.) write "the data indicate that...." rather than "the data indicates that....". I get a tiny amount of perverse delight on hearing/reading people "correcting" me on this issue![]()
It should be treated like the word staff.
The staff is eating dinner
The staff are eating dinner
If the reference is to discrete units, it is plural. If aggregate, then singular. Therefore in the first example they are eating together while in the second they are each eating on their own but at the same time. So data are rounded to two decimals before the data is processed.
Oh, and Mach - still haven not seen anything compelling from you. Sorry.
