Wednesday, April 17, 2019

grammaticality - "Work" (noun) is plural or singular?



I couldn't find an answer to this question by searching the archive. If it's duplicate please let me know, and I'll remove it.



I was wondeing if "work" (noun) is plural or singular? for example, I want to speak about the "previous work" (meaning previous published papers):



Is it correct to say:





I provide a high-level overview of the previous work, including "their" limitations.




Or I should say:




I provide a high-level overview of the previous work, including "its" limitations.





I also appreciate any suggestion for a more elegant way of saying that there are "niche" in the previous papers, that I'm going to highlight.


Answer



Work can be either singular or plural, and in your context, either is possible - but the pronoun must agree, in either case.



So you can either use




  • I provide a high-level overview of the previous work, including its limitations.




or




  • I provide a high-level overview of the previous works, including their limitations.



In the first case, you refer to the entire body of previous work, whereas in the second, you refer to multiple instances of previous works. The difference is subtle, though, and my initial point stands - I'd say that you can use either, as long as the pronoun is consistent.


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