Sorry, forgot to trim.
Devon

In a message dated 5/20/2014 8:36:50 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

Frequently, it is the person who has studied the language   formally who
understands it better than the native  speaker!

Regarding the plural of "lace", I have wondered about that  for  a long
time. I actually did a slide show entitled The Lace of the  Robber Barons.
But
noting that the book Antique Laces of the American  Collectors, written  in
the 1920s, which I used in the research seemed  to think that the plural  of
lace was laces, I sometimes called my  slide show The Laces of the Robber
Barons.

But, The Lace of the  Robber Barons sounded better to my ear. I  know that
there is a bit of  an escape clause in Strunk and White's Elements of  Style
that claims  that if it sounds wrong, don't do it, so I relied heavily on
that. But,  that seems overly liberal.

If I were to refer to the many different  kinds of lace in  France, I would
say "the laces of France" as in "The  laces of France are many  and
exquisite". If I were to buy an auction  lot of different pieces of lace, I
would say
I bought a box of  lace.

Thoughts?

Devon






In a message  dated 5/20/2014 7:59:49 A.M. Eastern Daylight  Time,
[email protected] writes:

Devon,
in German we are  lucky to have the hyphen. We can write  Klöppel-Spitzen
and so  on.
In English I wrote till today
lace maker/s,
lace  making,
needle lace,
bobbin lace,
crochet lace,
knitted   lace,
lace is in my opinion singular and plural but if I am speaking  of
different techniques of lace I am writing laces.
But I am not born  with an  "English tongue" so I am not competent to say
wich is right.  For me in that  way it sounds understandable.
Perhaps there are  English teachers on the  list who could explain this
after the rules  of English/american  language.
That would have be a wonderful question  for  Aurelia.

Ilske


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