<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>