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If I say "the majority of" followed by a plural noun, should it then be followed by a singular or a plural verb?

Some examples:

The majority of cars is blue.

The majority of cars are blue.

The majority of cars runs on gasoline.

The majority of cars run on gasoline.

The majority of patients is incurable.

The majority of patients are incurable.

I feel that in all cases I should use the plural verb form because the property applies to each individual component rather than to the mass.

PS: There is a similar thread The majority: plural or singular

gotube
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  • In terms of agreement, "majority" is a borderline case. Generally, there is plural override, but singular agreement can occur when the determiner is "a", as in "A large majority of voters is required for a decisive win". – BillJ Sep 29 '22 at 08:14
  • According to these grammarians, "the majority of" uses a singular verb and "a majority of" uses a plural one https://www.grammarphobia.com/blog/2007/09/majority-rules.html –  Sep 29 '22 at 09:53

2 Answers2

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These type of questions are frequently asked on the site. Some collective expressions take singular, but many, including this one, idiomatically will take either.

WS2
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  • I think you mean "Of all the cars on the road, the majority is/are white". – BillJ Sep 29 '22 at 08:09
  • According to the similar thread, it can also be idiomatically singular. –  Sep 29 '22 at 08:14
  • Take a look at this rule. It conflicts with yours. https://www.grammarphobia.com/blog/2007/09/majority-rules.html –  Sep 29 '22 at 09:58
  • I do realise I have got this wrong and I am going to edit it to indicate that either is possible. My apologies. – WS2 Sep 29 '22 at 11:47
  • I am not sure that either is possible. According to the link, **the majority of** uses a **singular** verb and **a majority of** uses **a plural** one. But maybe this rule is also wrong because all answers that I find on this subject are inconsistent... –  Sep 29 '22 at 14:19
  • Having said this, I don't know if "the majority of" and "a majority of" are synonyms. –  Sep 29 '22 at 14:21
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On its own, "the majority" is a collective noun, which means it can be used as singular or plural depending on the context and your intent. This is explained at this question.

But if "the majority" is followed by "...of X", then it's always used in the plural. So all your examples should be in the plural.

gotube
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  • https://www.grammarphobia.com/blog/2007/09/majority-rules.html This blog states that "the majority" should use a singular verb. What do you think? –  Sep 29 '22 at 15:27
  • @pierrot5 That blog says using "the" is "usually a tip-off" that its singular. This means "people usually *choose 'the' when it's a singular verb*, which the opposite of saying people *should use a singular verb with 'the'*. The blog also says that "**a** majority" is usually plural, "especially with of". I think this is too weak. Like I say in my answer, I think "a majority **of**" and "the majority **of**" are *always* plural. – gotube Sep 29 '22 at 15:58
  • Could the controversy come from this? **In British English a group noun can take either a singular or a plural verb. But in American English a group noun takes a singular verb.** https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/310009/a-group-of-dogs-emerge-or-emerges/310122#310122 –  Sep 29 '22 at 16:25
  • @pierrot5 No. I'm Canadian (we speak American English), and I'm saying that "the majority of X" will **always be plural**. And... that's not even true about American English speakers, as I've commented on that answer. – gotube Sep 29 '22 at 19:22