On the very first page of "Essential Grammar in Use" book of R.Murphy. He wrote
Those people aren't English. They're Australian.
My question are
- Is this sentence grammatically correct?
- What is plural forms of "English" and "Australian"?
- "English" and "Australian" play role as adjectives or nouns here?
Best Answer
In both these sentences English and Australian are adjectives. A singular noun would have a qualifier in front of it: He's an Australian, and a plural noun usually ends in an s: They're Australians. In the English language, each adjective only has a single form, regardless of number (i.e. whether it's describing a singular or plural word), which is how we distinguish each case.
The word English is a bit more complicated (or simple, depending on your point of view) because it doesn't have an associated gender-neutral noun, only Englishman and Englishwoman and their plural forms.
We could use the words British and Britons, however, they refer to any citizen of the United Kingdom including Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland as well as England.
The English are all Britons, but not all Britons are English. Australians are neither English nor British!