Grammatically every numeral that is not 1 uses the plural. At least in english.
You would say there are 0.9 elephants instead of there is 0.9 elephant as well.
The reason it feels more comfortable to you is that learning the english language has trained you think that way. Other languages do it differently. And in casual english you could easily say something like there is no elephant at all. But if you use a numerical value it is just stuck in language and culture. Just a matter of being used to it.
in English, 0 is plural – in other languages 0 is not plural
In arabic (and related) languages there is a 1s, 2s, and more form that re-occurs at 1,2,.. and 11,12,…, and 21,22,… and 31, 32 … and so forth
Languages are weird
this talks about some of it:
[https://lingohub.com/blog/2019/02/pluralization](https://lingohub.com/blog/2019/02/pluralization)
The Oxford dictioanaries also refer to things as “countable” verses not – countable
[https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/a1-a2-grammar/countable-and-uncountable-nouns-1](https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/a1-a2-grammar/countable-and-uncountable-nouns-1)
it depends on if you’re talking about a math situation or a sentence like in English. I may be reading the question wrong, but I’m sure if it’s it’s somebody with two esses at the end of your name. You don’t want to add an extra ass because it’ll look like there’s multiple of the same person so you would usually just do.
EX: Jesus’ not Jesus’s same thing with Moses because he has an S on the end of his name
Latest Answers