Objection!
You can use fishes for multiple species however it is not required. You can use fish for a collection of trout and bass
Objection!
You can use fishes for multiple species however it is not required. You can use fish for a collection of trout and bass
Now do email!
Does any other plural work this way? Or is this just another stupid ass English variation?
Person/People does. The word "peoples" can be used as multiple different groups of people.
For instance you can say to "the peoples of Europe" to refer to Germans, French, Italian, etc.
interesting. so it's like a plural or a plural. so I can say the monkeyses of the Amazon.
No because plural of the same type of monkey would still be monkeys.
But people is a non-countable word, like water. You don't have one people, two people.
When talking about peoples of [place] it's a countable word.
Fish is countable.
People are countable. That's the whole point of a census. Water can come in any amount, such as 3.5 litres. People come in discrete numbers. You can't have .5 of a person.
I think the thing confusing you is that it's one of those weird English words where the singular and plural word are different. Person/people vs car/cars.
You can still say "waters" though. For example: "The waters of Amsterdam" would collectively refer to all bodies of water in Amsterdam. Another example I came across online was "Don't forget your waters" which referred to multiple bottles of water.
Hmmm. I'm just going to keep using this to refer to all my I'll gotten gains.
If there's more than 1 species of sheep, can I say sheeps?
Sheepses
Chill, Gollum
Of course anyone who hears this is likely to just think you're an idiot.
I get eaten by the worms... and weird fishes...
It's a good thing that English isn't actually defined by any one person or entity, and simply by its usage. That means this is bullshit.
As you say in your first sentence, language is by consensus. And, the long-standing consensus among ichthyologists is to use exactly this terminology, and you'll find it consistently across the scientific literature for generations now.
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