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Raymond Ho
Grammar in "works as cabin crew" In the sentence "She works as cabin crew", is "cabin crew" just a short form of "a cabin crew member"? To my understanding, "crew" refers to a group of people, not an individual. Is such expression considered correct in formal English? Thanks.
Aug 19, 2017 2:38 PM
Answers · 4
2
You're right - native speakers understand it as "She works as (part of the) cabin crew". It's just a short form that we accept. You can't apply a grammatical rule here.
August 19, 2017
1
No, as you mention, crew refers to a team of people working together. In formal English, I would always refer to a crew member.
August 19, 2017
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