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Examples:

We can help ensure future shoppers complete their purchase.

vs

We can help ensure future shoppers complete their purchases.

Another:

The new law mandates city bikers wear a helmet.

vs.

The new law mandates city bikers wear helmets.

I believe I was taught that the pluralization of the subject must match the pluralization of the object. So, "mandates city bikers wear a helmet" would be incorrect, since it would technically imply those bikers were collectively wearing a single helmet. If we really wanted to use "a helmet", we could say "The new law mandates every city biker wear a helmet", since every singularizes biker.

But, common usage would imply both are correct. What's the proper form here?

akowalz
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    A shopper might make one or more purchases, but a biker will only wear one helmet. So the first pair of examples about shoppers can be either, but the second about bikers might be arguable. – Weather Vane Jan 20 '20 at 17:51
  • Why don't you regard the option "The new law mandates city bikers to wear their helmets"/"The new law mandates that city bikers wear their helmets"? – Victor B. Jan 20 '20 at 18:17
  • [Related post](https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/99607/subject-object-agreement) – Victor B. Jan 20 '20 at 18:22

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