A HUGE win for free speech
(stevekirsch.substack.com)
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Not to be that person, but I am: "two state attorney generals is a big deal", unless the writer is a Brit, that would be ATTORNEYS GENERAL.
Hey thanks for being “that guy”. I learned something new.
Thank you for your service.
In the British Armed Forces, the plural is sergeant majors and not sergeants major as it is in the United States. [wiki]
We both use Attorneys General :)
YW!
And thanks for being that guy so I wouldn't have to, LOL
But isn't "attorney general" together describing one subject, of which there are two (attorney general x 2 = 2 attorney generals)? This would be a good trick question on the ole grammar quiz.
You singularize and pluralize well!
Okay, I'll take a shot at this. I think it is attorneys general because the attorneys function in some general form. Could be wrong, but that makes sense to me
LawProse Lesson #262: The plural of “attorney general.”
What’s the plural of attorney general? The answer is attorneys general, not *attorney generals. (The asterisk signifies an always-erroneous form.)
A one-time alleged editor of the Harvard Law Review totally failed this easy test.
I think it's actually General Disarray.
KEK. You are correct.