The most petty of niggles
What is it with English speakers adding 's' in inappropriate places?
TESCO is neither plural (unless you are talking about the 4 stores you had to visit to get bog roll) nor possessive, although Sainbury's is.
Lego is a mass noun, and has no plural. You have lots of lego, or many lego bricks. The official site even gets quite cross about 'Legos'
There is a road I used to live near 'Northfield Avenue' even some satnavs make it 'Northfields' which it IS NOT. (I even had to check the sign; my brother's satnav managed to gass light me)
ARGH the irritation. What is it that drives people to this?
TESCO is neither plural (unless you are talking about the 4 stores you had to visit to get bog roll) nor possessive, although Sainbury's is.
Lego is a mass noun, and has no plural. You have lots of lego, or many lego bricks. The official site even gets quite cross about 'Legos'
There is a road I used to live near 'Northfield Avenue' even some satnavs make it 'Northfields' which it IS NOT. (I even had to check the sign; my brother's satnav managed to gass light me)
ARGH the irritation. What is it that drives people to this?
no subject
The Gardies comparison though... that's a shortening (the Gardenia, for those not in Cambridge, if I recall the offician sign correctly) and "cutesifying" which I guess would end with Tessies not Tesco's though.
no subject
Sainsbury's is definitely a possessive, that's true. Also, something like Selfridge's.
Actually, for M&S, I wonder how much the appearance that Marks is plural influences the Spencer(s) bit...
I might have to rewrite my vowel-final hypothesis a bit :)