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itinerary - sing.plur Is it correct to say trains itinerary to mean the routes of the trains, or the word is just route ? And are these expression always singular and why? Three weeks is a long time 100 pounds is a lot of money 100 litres of oil was spilled
Apr 4, 2014 10:38 AM
Answers · 2
2
An itinerary is a travel plan. You can say "train itinerary" or "train itineraries" (compound noun rules here), but I can't say that it's the same as "route". "Itinerary" can include several trains which make up a full journey. Good question about the plurals being treated as singular. We do this to mean the plural functions as a single unit, ie. "in total". If you use the plural are/were, then I'd think that each week/pound/litre was separate.
April 4, 2014
When you're dealing with numbers and measurements even distance, it should be singular.
April 4, 2014
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