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Eek! Another Grammar Thread!
Okay, which is proper when referring to myself:
"As an alumnae volunteer," "As an alumna volunteer," My spell checker keeps "correcting it" by converting it to the second one. |
Re: Eek! Another Grammar Thread!
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That's probably why it keeps going to the second one. If you are referring to yourself as an alumna member of your sorority, then I would use the second one. You could say "As an volunteer with an alumnae chapter", or something like that if you just want to use the word "alumnae". |
ETA: Nevermind. I figured out another way to word it. Thanks! :)
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Jubilance is right... I am pretty sure that "alumnae" is feminine plural, "alumna" is feminine singular, and "alumnus" is masculine plural. "Alumni" is used for mixed-sex plural.
Wow, too much information.... But there ya go. :) At least, that's what I was taught as an active. |
Alumnus--masculine singular
Alumni--masculine plural and mixed-sex plural Alumna--feminine singular Alumnae--feminine plural |
If you use proper Latin (which you should), Alumna is singular nominative case feminine, while -ae is plural. Alumnus is singular nominative case masculine, and -i is plural. For neuter, singular nominative is Alum, plural is -a.
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Re: Eek! Another Grammar Thread!
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Re: Re: Eek! Another Grammar Thread!
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Use "as a volunteer for the alumnae chapter..."
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Right, but I'm not referring to the alumnae chapter. :)
I went a completely different direction, so I got it figured out. Thanks everyone! |
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