I know it’s ok to use either one and the book we use teaches 'my family are".
Still, I always use my family is and feel a little irritated teaching the plural version.
Anyhow, since this is Taiwan, what’s the American way?
I know it’s ok to use either one and the book we use teaches 'my family are".
Still, I always use my family is and feel a little irritated teaching the plural version.
Anyhow, since this is Taiwan, what’s the American way?
It depends on whether you are speaking collectively of the group as a singular entity (I have A large family; my family is large), or whether you are referring to the individuals which comprise it (my family (members) are all here; my family (members) are all big and tall; my family are all rather large).
Agree with DB.
My family is in debt.
My family are in debt.
You can see a group as a bunch of individuals or as a collective whole made up of individuals.
You see a group noun with a plural then use IS. My family is dumb.
You see a group noun with a singular then use ARE. My family are dumb.
Stop pandering to stupid questions. Pre-int need to fix this shit by themselves.
My relatives are…
my brother and sister are…
my parents are …
my friends are…
my classmates are…
my family is…
my fraternity is…
my club is…
Family is a singular “it” because its realm is logistically uncountable.
I’ll thumb wrestle anyome who thinks otherwise! 
Your dichotomies are false.
When it comes to collective nouns like “team” or “family”, Brits tend to use the plural, while Americans tend to use the singular.
I was concerned about this too haha.
I’m relieve to be able to use both. Sometimes different ways of grammar between American and British English confuses me a lot!
Singular. A family is a group or a set.
Oh, come on.
Actually it depends on whether the family in question is British or American.
If they’re British you go through all the machinations above.
If the family is American, it’s always singular. Same with nouns like “company” or “team”. I have heard “team” used with plural verbs in the US recently, but I think there was a very strong association of the “team” being the plural members on it, not the entity, in that case.
I wish the Brits would keep from fucking around with the English language. Thank you very much
If it weren’t singular, then other allowances would exist for it. They don’t say “many family” or “much family,” because ‘family’ isn’t a plural or mass noun (or when it refers to the concept of being involved in a family, e.g. “Politicians spin a lot of rhetoric to the belief in family as a source for moral guidance.”).
There’s a difference between a nonstandard usage and grammatical consistency:
Sometimes Brits say “…family are…”
This goes for Americanisms, too:
Sometimes Yanks say “…you ain’t…”
If they brought it up, I would tell them exactly that.
[quote=“ehophi”]If it weren’t singular, then other allowances would exist for it. They don’t say “many family” or “much family,” because ‘family’ isn’t a plural or mass noun (or when it refers to the concept of being involved in a family, e.g. “Politicians spin a lot of rhetoric to the belief in family as a source for moral guidance.”).
There’s a difference between a nonstandard usage and grammatical consistency:
Sometimes Brits say “…family are…”
This goes for Americanisms, too:
Sometimes Yanks say “…you ain’t…”
If they brought it up, I would tell them exactly that.[/quote]
Actually, I think it is quite allowable to say, "I don’t have much family.’
Family switches from a collective noun to a plural in terms of pronouns even in American English.
My family lived in England in the 16th century, but now we live in America.
Why is it two cannon, not two cannons? Same kind of thing. English is so arbitrary at times.
Cannons is generally American English. Cannon in British English is considered an irregular countable noun like sheep.
What about: “He shot 5 lion today”?
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[quote=“Hamletintaiwan”]I know it’s ok to use either one and the book we use teaches 'my family are".
Still, I always use my family is and feel a little irritated teaching the plural version.
Anyhow, since this is Taiwan, what’s the American way?[/quote]
The plural form of family is families. ‘‘My family are’’ is just wrong. Of course, ‘‘family members’’ is totally different.
Absolutely,My family is…
The singular is used a lot in the language of game hunting.
This thread is kind of hilarious to a nom-native speaker like myself.
So, in some areas, British English is traditional and American English is simplified. Think Traditional Chinese and Simplified Chinese. Or not even close?