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View Full Version : Is "Bellows" a Singluar or a Plural name?



marcookie
19-Apr-2019, 15:59
From the Merriam-Webster:

bellows

noun

plural in form but singular or plural in construction

Bob Salomon
19-Apr-2019, 16:10
Belli was a lawyer.

Mark Sawyer
19-Apr-2019, 16:23
"The bellows is..." or "the bellows are..."?

Off the top of my head, I'd say "the bellows are..."


From the Merriam-Webster:

plural in form but singular or plural in construction

Merriam-Webster is about as conclusive as the Mueller Report...

Dan Fromm
19-Apr-2019, 16:24
Bellow is a verb.

Jac@stafford.net
19-Apr-2019, 16:30
Bellow is a verb.

Bellows is a noun which works for a single object and a non-possesive collection of the same.

Tin Can
19-Apr-2019, 16:34
He bellows about bellows.

Drew Wiley
19-Apr-2019, 16:42
You have to go back to the root word or etymology. The terms bellows is derived from "hollerin n' bellerin", a suite of loud noises associated with finding fogging on developed glass plates, then tracing these to pinholes or tears in the camera fabric. But this fact was forgotten once Daguerretypists were driven so insane from mercury fumes that they just hollered and bellered continuously for no apparent reason, just like we still do on this forum for no apparent reason. Thus there needs to be no rational reason for "bellows" to be either singular or plural. You just stretch it and it changes anyway. Why is "moose" both singular and plural, instead of becoming "meese", or "deer" always deer, instead of becoming "dice" like "mice". Should purchasing more than one Deardorff camera at a time be
terms a "Dicedorff" purchase. If you want consistency, pick some other language besides English.

Leszek Vogt
19-Apr-2019, 16:46
OK, I'll get little more wild than Randy. A"bellow" (singular) would be one fold, right ? Where does that get you, may have to use 38mm on 8x10 rig ?
So instead we have the plural. 'Nuff of this linguistic jibberish. :p

Les

Vaughn
19-Apr-2019, 17:45
...then tracing these to pinholes or tears in the camera fabric. ...

Crying tears in my bellows over you...

(sounds like a Patsy Cline song...)

pepeguitarra
19-Apr-2019, 19:22
Bellows is singular and Bellows is plural. Just like FISH is singular and FISH is plural (except for Lucca Brassi).

Emmanuel BIGLER
20-Apr-2019, 08:02
He bellows about bellows.

"They stood bellowing at each other."

Fortunately, this never happens here (or: only virtually ;) )

Tin Can
20-Apr-2019, 08:14
Fish & Fishes usage. (https://tellmewhyfacts.com/2007/01/when-do-you-use-word-fish-and-fishes.html)


Bellows is singular and Bellows is plural. Just like FISH is singular and FISH is plural (except for Lucca Brassi).

Vaughn
20-Apr-2019, 08:46
Film and films?

pepeguitarra
20-Apr-2019, 08:55
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo ??

Oren Grad
20-Apr-2019, 09:01
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo ??

Not all of them do this. ;)

jmontague
20-Apr-2019, 09:06
GHOTI = FISH (touGH wOmen naTIon).

Sorry - off topic but could not resist.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Tin Can
20-Apr-2019, 09:13
Film/films according to Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film) is a movie. Full stop.

But Wiki does write about, 'Prominent Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens, is nowadays widely accepted as the true inventor of the magic lantern.' in 1650 which created movement by sliding 2 glass plates coated with images. So stills of film became films....


Film and films?

rdeloe
20-Apr-2019, 12:47
Combining grammar and photography -- seems really dangrerous! ;)

Tin Can
20-Apr-2019, 12:57
English is my first language, so I find it difficult.

I never real understood it, until I studied 2 years of Latin.

Then Romance languages made sense...:cool: