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Plymouth people


irmamar May 24, 2011 12:53 PM

Plymouth people
 
I was writing: "Plymouth people blah, blah, blah". But maybe I'm wrong. Should it be "Plymouth's people" or perhaps "People from Plymouth"?

Thanks in advance.

poli May 24, 2011 01:10 PM

It sounds natural to say: the people from Plymouth (or of Plymouth)

pjt33 May 24, 2011 01:31 PM

"Plymouth people" sounds fine to me for conversational English. If you're writing in a high register then "People from Plymouth" is less likely to provoke complaints from pedants.

Caballero May 24, 2011 05:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pjt33 (Post 111141)
"Plymouth people" sounds fine to me for conversational English.

It sounds rather odd on this side of the pond, though.

Perikles May 25, 2011 02:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 111139)
I was writing: "Plymouth people blah, blah, blah". But maybe I'm wrong. Should it be "Plymouth's people" or perhaps "People from Plymouth"?.

As Pjt says. I see a difference between Plymouth people an Plymouth's people: in the first, Plymouth (pronounced pli-muth like ink - country, by the way :rolleyes: [yes, it is at the mouth of the river Ply, but not pronounced like mouse]).. where was I? ah - Plymouth is used as an adjective for some people from Plymouth, for example those who sailed off to America clutching their bibles. In Plymouth's people, this implies the whole of the population of Plymouth, living in the town. Even then, The People of Plymouth sounds better. :)

irmamar May 25, 2011 04:50 AM

The sentence is related to the first Puritans established in Plymouth (good the know the correct pronunciation, by the way :D ). In this case, I think, as Perikles points out, that "Plymouth people" would be correct, wouldn't it?

Perikles May 25, 2011 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 111183)
The sentence is related to the first Puritans established in Plymouth (good the know the correct pronunciation, by the way :D ). In this case, I think, as Perikles points out, that "Plymouth people" would be correct, wouldn't it?

Yes it would, although you might actually mean The Pilgrim Fathers who did exactly that. :)


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