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Is the word `credentials` singular or plural?
Plural Possessive of a Singular NounHow should one make “man in the middle” plural?Parenthetical plurals of nouns with stems that are written differently in singular and pluralWhat is the plural of “Freight”?Plural for “photo”?Singular vs plural: the effect of conjunctionsShould directories be named in singular or plural?Can “masters” (plural) be used to refer to a single entity?What is the etymology of a pair of trousersHow to determine the number of the noun phrase 'a world of + plural noun'?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I know that the word credentials is the plural form of credential.
And I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials. Oxford dictionary also suggests that the word credentials is widely used over the word credential. Taking all these into account,
Which of the following is right?
- The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
- The credentials that you have provided is invalid.
EDIT: I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials, That's what has made me ask this question.
grammatical-number
|
show 4 more comments
I know that the word credentials is the plural form of credential.
And I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials. Oxford dictionary also suggests that the word credentials is widely used over the word credential. Taking all these into account,
Which of the following is right?
- The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
- The credentials that you have provided is invalid.
EDIT: I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials, That's what has made me ask this question.
grammatical-number
6
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
4
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
2
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
2
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43
|
show 4 more comments
I know that the word credentials is the plural form of credential.
And I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials. Oxford dictionary also suggests that the word credentials is widely used over the word credential. Taking all these into account,
Which of the following is right?
- The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
- The credentials that you have provided is invalid.
EDIT: I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials, That's what has made me ask this question.
grammatical-number
I know that the word credentials is the plural form of credential.
And I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials. Oxford dictionary also suggests that the word credentials is widely used over the word credential. Taking all these into account,
Which of the following is right?
- The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
- The credentials that you have provided is invalid.
EDIT: I'm referring to a single pair of username and password as credentials, That's what has made me ask this question.
grammatical-number
grammatical-number
edited Mar 28 at 11:08
Raja Anbazhagan
asked Dec 4 '15 at 17:03
Raja AnbazhaganRaja Anbazhagan
13527
13527
6
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
4
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
2
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
2
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43
|
show 4 more comments
6
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
4
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
2
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
2
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43
6
6
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
4
4
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
2
2
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
2
2
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43
|
show 4 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
According to Merriam-Webster:
Credentials is the plural of the word credential.
It is grammatically correct to say the first option:
The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
Credentials is used over its singular form credential but it is still a plural noun.
add a comment |
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According to Merriam-Webster:
Credentials is the plural of the word credential.
It is grammatically correct to say the first option:
The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
Credentials is used over its singular form credential but it is still a plural noun.
add a comment |
According to Merriam-Webster:
Credentials is the plural of the word credential.
It is grammatically correct to say the first option:
The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
Credentials is used over its singular form credential but it is still a plural noun.
add a comment |
According to Merriam-Webster:
Credentials is the plural of the word credential.
It is grammatically correct to say the first option:
The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
Credentials is used over its singular form credential but it is still a plural noun.
According to Merriam-Webster:
Credentials is the plural of the word credential.
It is grammatically correct to say the first option:
The credentials that you have provided are invalid.
Credentials is used over its singular form credential but it is still a plural noun.
edited Jul 11 '17 at 14:53
answered Jul 11 '17 at 0:59
Akaisteph7Akaisteph7
30017
30017
add a comment |
add a comment |
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6
Often times one must present more than one credential to prove themselves in a situation which why the plural form is used most often.. You have stated correctly that credentials is plural. Therefore you would use "are".
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:10
But I will still be referring to a single pair of username and password isn't it?
– Raja Anbazhagan
Dec 4 '15 at 17:11
4
in that specific case it could be considered that both the username and password are separate credentials as they both need to be correct to login.
– Skooba
Dec 4 '15 at 17:14
2
The word 'credentials', though not without a singular form, is used almost as a mass noun (with obvious plural form, and taking plural agreement) like 'details'. The singular is very rare, at least in BrE. Compare 'information' which is singular in form and takes singular agreement, which has a very rare plural form, and 'data' and 'news', plural in form but treated as a singular concept and given singular agreement.
– Edwin Ashworth
Dec 4 '15 at 17:57
2
It may help to look at "referring to a single pair" as talking about other pairs, like shoes: I have only a single pair of shoes, and my shoes are black. Your trousers are grey. Those twins are not identical.
– Yosef Baskin
Jun 15 '17 at 5:43