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woods - gramatically singular or plural

English Language Learners Asked on November 10, 2021

It is clear that “woods” is semantically plural, but what about gramatically? Can it be both singular and plural, as other collective nouns ? Example:

  • The woods of this town contain many secrets.
  • The woods of this town contains many secrets.

One Answer

I believe the answer to your question should be "The woods near the town contain many secrets."

Cambridge Dictionary calls "woods" a "plural noun", with the example "Shaded from the sun, the woods were cool and quiet."

wiktionary.org is more cautious: "usually in the plural, sometimes singular" and "Woods more often takes a plural verb (determiner, etc, as in these woods are) than a singular verb (as in this woods is)."

There is an interesting and apropos comment on english.stackexchange.com:

It gets trickier when there's an adjective. Although I can find both of these constructions in Google books, I wouldn't say a small woods (because it's plural), or some small woods (because mass nouns don't work that way; you can't say some small rice either). I'd say a small stretch of woods or a large expanse of woods. – Peter Shor

Answered by Sam on November 10, 2021

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