Why do they use 'persons'. Which word is correct and what is the difference between these words? The original question goes like this:
I heard this phrase in tropic thunder. (the peoples of africa) this. People can also mean a group persons, a population, or ethnicity.
People means a group of. The flood which happened last week caused 100 people's. People people's i heard somebody say that "people's does not work in a sentence. The sentence in question is it rained on the head of james, steve, and billy.
Done, conducted, or administered in the course of following up persons. Given the title (how to make our life wonderful.?), i would consider that person is not using life correctly. People and person have separate latin origins, and they came to english at different times by different paths, but. To me it sounds like it should be it rained on the heads of james, steve, and billy.
(the people of france) peoples is the plural of people, in this second sense. This isn't the first time i've seen a character in a movie/tv show use you people and be accused of racism for it. Ask question asked 5 years, 9 months ago modified 5 years, 9 months ago Grammarist says in modern english, people is the de facto plural of person.
The title says it all. I don't think gives emphasis to the people's individual nature is at all relevant to either of op's cited contexts (many creative individuals, an unscrupulous individual).