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- What is the plural of equipment? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Google ngrams doesn't stem, but you still need to check the results A comparison of equipment and equipments shows that the plural form does occur but at a much smaller frequency than the plural form Even given this lesser frequency it looks like 'equipments' was more common in the past, in foreign works, and in technical works
- equipment or equipments? - WordReference Forums
Equipments is used in the automotive industry a great deal to talk about optional elements for a car offer (like electric windows, or Pro-level: refrigerated compartments, dump truck beds, hatchbacks, etc) Also used in the military, as explained earlier It is incorrect, but is slipping into common usage, and will be an accepted term soon, I
- equipment or equipments - WordReference Forums
Also, one can refer to "the many equipments I use in the course of my day", referring here to kinds of equipment, rather than to one example or other of any such equipment Again, all this is perfectly understandable
- Plural nouns - WordReference Forums
I am confused with the plural nouns, please help: 1 I think you can't say these equipments, nor these equipment, so you should say the equipment, a lot of equipment, or many pieces of euipment instead? 2 The Google search shows the following results Result should be plural or singular
- A new equipment will be introduced | WordReference Forums
If this new equipment is Mobile phone charging piles, can we say the following sentence: A new equipment will be introduced in bus stops soon For in dictionaries, equpment is either (uncountable) or (singualar form), but we do often see on the introduction to equipment manufacturers on their websites that they use "equipments" (in plural forms)
- Number of equipment - WordReference Forums
Hi I know that the noun 'equipment' is a mass noun But is it okay to say 'the number of equipment' to refer to the quantity of equipment pieces? The following is a sentence from EUR-Lex — Access to European Union law — choose your language Thus, a compulsory mechanism for MS's contributions
- grammatical number - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
For example, you couldn't say *"I have two equipments", instead you would have to use "I have two pieces of equipment " Because equipment is treated as a singular noun, even when it refers to multiple objects, it must take the singular form of the verb, so "Is the equipment in the work centre calibrated?" would be correct
- DEEE (déchets d’équipements électriques et électroniques)
DEEE I have found stands for Dechets d'equipments et electroniques, and I'm not quite sure what the dechets are here Does it refer to physical waste or electronic waste? Any help would be much appreciated Thank you!
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