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Ava ✻
Lego, Legos or Lego bricks?

Inspired by an article I have just come across (https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/lego-or-legos), I wanted to know what you think.

I usually say "Lego bricks". "Legos" sounds OK to me as well. I can imagine asking my kids to "Put your Legos away" or "Put your Lego bricks away". I don't know if I'd ever say: "Put your Lego away".

And what do you say?





2019年2月5日 11:20
コメント · 3
5

This is a UK/US English difference, with apologies to other native speakers for oversimplification.

In the UK, we consider "Lego" uncountable. We would need a word like "brick" to talk about Lego in a countable way ("Lego brick").

In the US, Lego is considered in a countable way. One Lego = one Lego brick. I don't know if Americans also use Lego in an uncountable way, to describe the material e.g. It is made of Lego, not wood. Perhaps someone could help?


2019年2月5日
2
I definitely say "Legos." You never really have only one Lego piece, so saying "put your Lego away!" would be weird, like saying "put your pant away!" instead of pants haha.
2019年2月5日
1
I've always grown up with the word "lego" being a singular as well as a plural noun. Interestingly, the more I think about it, the more I believe that I'd naturally say "put your lego away!
2019年2月5日

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