<p>Hi, I have some grammar questions that I am wondering about and want to hear your opinions. Could you please help me out with this?</p>
<p>1) Is this sentence grammatically correct?
I have never met George or Lennie, so I cannot judge them/
I have never met George and Lennie, so I cannot judge him</p>
<p>2) Which is correct?
Russian is very friendly.
Russians are very friendly.
Russian are very friendly.
How to make the plural form of words like American, British, Thai, Italian, etc.</p>
<p>THANKS IN ADVANCE.</p>
<ol>
<li><p>I have never met George or Lennie, so i cannot judge -insert name here to avoid ambiguity—.
wrong I have never met George and Lennie, so I cannot judge him.
Unless Lennie is a girl~~u can say him; nevertheless this sentence is very awkward, you’ll left out Lennie if lennie is a girl. so the best way to revise this:
I have never met George and Lennie, so I cannot judge them</p></li>
<li><p>this is very awkward- Russian is very friendly. im not sure if there’s a rule to this,but i think of it this way, russian itself is an adj, if its the people russian, then its gotta be Russians. again,i dont know if this is true,but u wont see this kind of stuff on SAT, it’ll be very clear, for instance, “the Russians…” “The Russian quilt…”
Russians are very friendly. —yes this is correct
Russian are very friendly.—my instinct is NO, same as 1st one.</p></li>
</ol>