On 2015-04-17, Peter Lawler <centos@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > [OT ALERT] > > On 17/04/15 02:28, Valeri Galtsev wrote: > >> clamav is a scanner that is designed to detect viruses (virii I >> should use for plural as it is Latin word) > I believe this 'rule' in English is misunderstood by many and as a > general rule of thumb... tl;dr: Words from Old English that came into > modern English, use 'Old English' pluralisation: eg, sheep, fish etc. > words adopted from other languages into English before and after > modern English established, use 'modern' pluralisation eg, tsunamis, > octopuses. > ><rant> As 'virus' was adopted into English for usage in relation to >bugs, malwares etc. after the formation of modern English, the plural >of computer virus is computer viruses. IMO, in a medical sense, the >virus was first described in the 1890 - well after the formation of >modern English so even then the plural of virus in English is viruses. I agree entirely. Also relevant is the fact that the Latin word 'virus' does not admit a plural form. > > Reasoning: If one had to learn the pluralisation of every word adopted > into modern English, then an English speaker would have to learn the > pluralisation rules for far more than just English (see above re > tsunami, octopus but also consider other non old English words such as > emoji alligator mannequin boulevard cookie umbrella alcohol nadir etc.) > For old English words, the pluralisation rules for them was set before > modern English evolved into what we know today so those old rules still > apply. > > All in all, makes it a lot easier to know how to spell English plurals. > > Some think opctopi is the plural of octopuses, when it wouldn't be > because it's Greek and not Latin anyway... > > To whit: the belief many have that the English plural of virus is virii, > when in fact if anything it'd be afaik viri - which it isn't. The Latin word 'viri' translates as 'men', if I remember my school Latin correctly. :-) > > my 2c. > > Pete. > > [Authority: Platypuses, or Platypus - I believe the linguists are still > out on that one - live near me ;) ] -- Liam _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos