0 (in) the form of a word which expresses more than one -- รูปพหูพจน์
Thus, the formation of regular plurals is an instance of ordinary combinatoriality.
Specifically, they will stand out for those of us in the collectivity as words that "we" as a plural subject maintain.
The evidence suggests, therefore, that won has no subject-number feature at all, rather than that it is ambiguous between singular and plural.
Collections are 'typically inanimate', they occur 'readily in the plural, but when singular cannot contract plural concord with the verb'.
Of course, where there is agreement in number, there is no simple correlation of verb forms with singular and plural number.
Here, the verb is plural although the subject is singular.
The subject of this sentence (any listener) is grammatically singular, but the pronoun, which refers back to it, is plural (their).
The genitive case has three different markers, each restricted to a different subset of nouns, in both the singular and the plural.