“The Left/Right are in tears” The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InSingular or plural: “The figure(s) in the center and on the right show that…”Meaning of “just as much” and “just as”?What does “Nothing doing as he took it right to him” mean?Using the word “stick”“Making Do” or “Make Do”?Surprisingly happyMeaning of the “but” in the sentenceHow to punctuate interpolated interjections which are sentencesfor which… I'm confused please helpDefining clause boundaries when 'also' is used

Is it ok to offer lower paid work as a trial period before negotiating for a full-time job?

Mathematics of imaging the black hole

What's the name of these plastic connectors

Why not take a picture of a closer black hole?

How can I add encounters in the Lost Mine of Phandelver campaign without giving PCs too much XP?

Star Trek - X-shaped Item on Regula/Orbital Office Starbases

writing variables above the numbers in tikz picture

Old scifi movie from the 50s or 60s with men in solid red uniforms who interrogate a spy from the past

How can I define good in a religion that claims no moral authority?

Can withdrawing asylum be illegal?

What is the most efficient way to store a numeric range?

Are spiders unable to hurt humans, especially very small spiders?

If I score a critical hit on an 18 or higher, what are my chances of getting a critical hit if I roll 3d20?

How do you keep chess fun when your opponent constantly beats you?

Relationship between Gromov-Witten and Taubes' Gromov invariant

How to translate "being like"?

Cooking pasta in a water boiler

Is Cinnamon a desktop environment or a window manager? (Or both?)

What is this business jet?

Why “相同意思的词” is called “同义词” instead of "同意词"?

Currents/voltages graph for an electrical circuit

Is it correct to say the Neural Networks are an alternative way of performing Maximum Likelihood Estimation? if not, why?

What do these terms in Caesar's Gallic wars mean?

What is the motivation for a law requiring 2 parties to consent for recording a conversation



“The Left/Right are in tears”



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InSingular or plural: “The figure(s) in the center and on the right show that…”Meaning of “just as much” and “just as”?What does “Nothing doing as he took it right to him” mean?Using the word “stick”“Making Do” or “Make Do”?Surprisingly happyMeaning of the “but” in the sentenceHow to punctuate interpolated interjections which are sentencesfor which… I'm confused please helpDefining clause boundaries when 'also' is used



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








0















I'm trying to say something like "The liberals of US are in tears today over (a political news)".
I want to shorten it to "The left are in tears".
However when I google for that phrase, I see that nobody ever used this sentence. Could you please help me rephrase that?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

    – Jason Bassford
    4 hours ago












  • You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

    – K Dog
    3 hours ago

















0















I'm trying to say something like "The liberals of US are in tears today over (a political news)".
I want to shorten it to "The left are in tears".
However when I google for that phrase, I see that nobody ever used this sentence. Could you please help me rephrase that?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

    – Jason Bassford
    4 hours ago












  • You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

    – K Dog
    3 hours ago













0












0








0


1






I'm trying to say something like "The liberals of US are in tears today over (a political news)".
I want to shorten it to "The left are in tears".
However when I google for that phrase, I see that nobody ever used this sentence. Could you please help me rephrase that?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm trying to say something like "The liberals of US are in tears today over (a political news)".
I want to shorten it to "The left are in tears".
However when I google for that phrase, I see that nobody ever used this sentence. Could you please help me rephrase that?







grammar






share|improve this question







New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 4 hours ago









AleharAlehar

1063




1063




New contributor




Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Alehar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 6





    There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

    – Jason Bassford
    4 hours ago












  • You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

    – K Dog
    3 hours ago












  • 6





    There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

    – Jason Bassford
    4 hours ago












  • You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

    – K Dog
    3 hours ago







6




6





There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

– Jason Bassford
4 hours ago






There is nothing wrong with the left are in tears when a political context is made clear. It would be a mistake to think that the lack of a Google search result indicates something unidiomatic or ungrammatical.

– Jason Bassford
4 hours ago














You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

– K Dog
3 hours ago





You could say: I love the salty goodness of Liberal tears as the relive Crooked's loss through Mueller's exoneration of Trump. Or anything from freebeacon.com/blog/hillary-clinton-failure-joke

– K Dog
3 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














You will find more Google hits if you search for "the left is in tears". In US English, collective nouns - organisations, teams, political groupings, companies, etc, are almost invariably considered to be singular. Your use of the plural 'are' reflects the British usage, which allows both singular and plural. To answer your question, you can say the left are (or is) in tears, smiling, delighted, unhappy, confused, punching the air, etc about some political news (not 'a news' - news is uncountable).






share|improve this answer























  • Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    3 hours ago












  • ("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

    – Michael Harvey
    2 hours ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "97"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);






Alehar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f493534%2fthe-left-right-are-in-tears%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














You will find more Google hits if you search for "the left is in tears". In US English, collective nouns - organisations, teams, political groupings, companies, etc, are almost invariably considered to be singular. Your use of the plural 'are' reflects the British usage, which allows both singular and plural. To answer your question, you can say the left are (or is) in tears, smiling, delighted, unhappy, confused, punching the air, etc about some political news (not 'a news' - news is uncountable).






share|improve this answer























  • Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    3 hours ago












  • ("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

    – Michael Harvey
    2 hours ago















1














You will find more Google hits if you search for "the left is in tears". In US English, collective nouns - organisations, teams, political groupings, companies, etc, are almost invariably considered to be singular. Your use of the plural 'are' reflects the British usage, which allows both singular and plural. To answer your question, you can say the left are (or is) in tears, smiling, delighted, unhappy, confused, punching the air, etc about some political news (not 'a news' - news is uncountable).






share|improve this answer























  • Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    3 hours ago












  • ("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

    – Michael Harvey
    2 hours ago













1












1








1







You will find more Google hits if you search for "the left is in tears". In US English, collective nouns - organisations, teams, political groupings, companies, etc, are almost invariably considered to be singular. Your use of the plural 'are' reflects the British usage, which allows both singular and plural. To answer your question, you can say the left are (or is) in tears, smiling, delighted, unhappy, confused, punching the air, etc about some political news (not 'a news' - news is uncountable).






share|improve this answer













You will find more Google hits if you search for "the left is in tears". In US English, collective nouns - organisations, teams, political groupings, companies, etc, are almost invariably considered to be singular. Your use of the plural 'are' reflects the British usage, which allows both singular and plural. To answer your question, you can say the left are (or is) in tears, smiling, delighted, unhappy, confused, punching the air, etc about some political news (not 'a news' - news is uncountable).







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









Michael HarveyMichael Harvey

6,81111120




6,81111120












  • Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    3 hours ago












  • ("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

    – Michael Harvey
    2 hours ago

















  • Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    3 hours ago












  • ("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago











  • "Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

    – Michael Harvey
    2 hours ago
















Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago





Yep, "the left is in tears" (with quotes) gets me 14 hits, about 8 of which appear to be valid (and non-dupe) uses of the term in the OP's sense. "The left are in tears" gets me one valid hit.

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago




1




1





Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

– TaliesinMerlin
3 hours ago






Once one eliminates constructions like "the man on the left/right is in tears," the difference in results is slight. ~10 results mostly focused on one usage by Steve Bannon does not make a solid argument for usage. I'd omit the results as inconclusive and keep or expand on the reasoning based on grammar.

– TaliesinMerlin
3 hours ago














("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago





("The right is/are in tears" doesn't get me anything. I suspect that this is because the Left is generally portrayed as more emotional than the Right.)

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago













"Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago





"Liberals are in tears" gets over 21,000 hits!!! "Conservatives are in tears" gets 1.

– Hot Licks
3 hours ago













"Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

– Michael Harvey
2 hours ago





"Republicans eat shit" (with the quotes) got "About 9,580,000 results", but, even with the quotes, a lot of them are just pages containing both the name of the party and the vulgar term for faeces.

– Michael Harvey
2 hours ago










Alehar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















Alehar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












Alehar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











Alehar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f493534%2fthe-left-right-are-in-tears%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

Category:Tremithousa Media in category "Tremithousa"Navigation menuUpload media34° 49′ 02.7″ N, 32° 26′ 37.32″ EOpenStreetMapGoogle EarthProximityramaReasonatorScholiaStatisticsWikiShootMe

Dokschytsy (Steed) Kwelen | NawigatsjuunBelarus: Vitebsk Region, citypopulation.de