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Jimmy Cinnabon

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3 minutes ago, BerniePragle said:

Gents, proceed cautiously.  If we keep spelling like this, pretty soon we'll be Facebook. 

i don't like this anymore than you do, just don't want to be bullied by the only one on here whose stupider than me.

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"Half measures are a coward's form of insanity."

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Very interesting grammar take:  Can an adjective be nounified?   See what I did there, made a noun - actually the freaking word NOUN - into a verb!!!

Cincinnati Reds,  St. Louis Blues, Homestead Grays, New Zealand All Blacks.  I am leaving out the Cleveland Browns as they were named after Paul Brown who was a person, place, or thing and therefore a noun.

It is very common to turn a traditional adjective into a noun and make it plural.  I am siding with Duals as approved lexicon.

Edited by Lipdrag
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4 minutes ago, Lipdrag said:

Very interesting grammar take:  Can an adjective be nounified?   See what I did there, made a noun - actually the freaking word NOUN - into a verb!!!

Cincinnati Reds,  St. Louis Blues, Homestead Grays, New Zealand All Blacks.  I am leaving out the Cleveland Browns as they were named after Paul Brown who was a person, place, or thing and therefore a noun.

It is very common to turn a traditional adjective into a noun and make it plural.  I am siding with Duals as approved lexicon.

Which means it can be both ???

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5 minutes ago, Lipdrag said:

Very interesting grammar take:  Can an adjective be nounified?   See what I did there, made a noun - actually the freaking word NOUN into a verb!!!

Cincinnati Reds,  St. Louis Blues, Homestead Grays, New Zealand All Blacks.  I am leaving out the Cleveland Browns as they were named after Paul Brown who was a person, place, or thing and therefore a noun.

It is very common to turn a traditional adjective into a noun and make it plural.  I am siding with Duals as approved lexicon.

so you think the marketing of professional sports teams should have abritary authority over grammar as an academic subject?

I don't deny your argument but it sounds like a confusion of what level we are arguing at.

Edited by Hammerlock3
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"Half measures are a coward's form of insanity."

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5 minutes ago, Lipdrag said:

Very interesting grammar take:  Can an adjective be nounified?   See what I did there, made a noun - actually the freaking word NOUN - into a verb!!!

Cincinnati Reds,  St. Louis Blues, Homestead Grays, New Zealand All Blacks.  I am leaving out the Cleveland Browns as they were named after Paul Brown who was a person, place, or thing and therefore a noun.

It is very common to turn a traditional adjective into a noun and make it plural.  I am siding with Duals as approved lexicon.

I thought Reds was short for Red Stockings. 

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8 minutes ago, Hammerlock3 said:

so you think the marketing of professional sports teams should have abritary authority over grammar as an academic subject?

I don't have the authority to grant or deny authority.  I am simply pointing out historical usage.  I will add example(s) of amateur sports marketing Nounifying an Adjective - Penn Relays.  It is just cooler sounding than Penn Relay Races.

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Just now, Lipdrag said:

I don't have the authority to grant or deny authority.  I am simply pointing out historical usage.  I will add example(s) of amateur sports marketing Nounifying an Adjective - Penn Relays.  It is just cooler sounding than Penn Relay Races.

Its American English.  There are no concrete rules.  We’ll do anything to shorten things up. 

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