The Nordic model, often touted as a paragon of progressive social policies, has long been the envy of many nations. Finland, in particular, has been praised for its generous parental support programs, designed to encourage and facilitate family growth. Yet, despite these well-intentioned efforts, the country has witnessed a startling decline in its birthrate, plummeting by nearly a third since 2010.
non member link: https://medium.com/@chrisjeffrieshomelessromantic/the-birthrate-in-finland-has-plummeted-by-nearly-a-33-since-2010-despite-parental-support-7fd60220b109?sk=90d8976af82ed29268286a3d6e79b633
The data tell a different story.
That's my ration of pedantry spent. You'd swear these people never went to school.
The issue with pedantry is you have to make sure you're right - data here is the collective noun for a group of individual data, so is used correctly.
Plus "plummeted by a 33%" was literally right there
The phrase is “The data tells a different story”
Data itself is singular as it’s a defined entity. It is the sum of its parts.
If it said “data points”, then you would be right.
It's clearly plural, in form and meaning. That's my point. If it were singular it'd be 'datum'. It has a second-declension plural ending.
This also bothers me. Why say 'data point' instead of 'datum'? Illiterate bloody philistines.
They're referring to data as a single unified whole.
Family is singular despite being made of multiple members. Data is singular despite being composed of multiple data points.
That makes as much sense as "Countries says the story is different. I'm referring to countries as a single unified whole"
https://www.thesaurus.com/e/grammar/data-is-or-data-are/
Seems like "data tells" is fine according to this.
Language changes over time.
You’re technically correct but it’s one of those “technically correct”s that I would say is so far from people’s actual usage and the way other words work that it’s actually wrong and makes you sound stupid.
You wouldn’t say “The student body are…” or “the rat colony are…” They’re single bodies made up of smaller parts, so they get referred to as singular.
My PI always says “the data are” and it grates on me like nails on a chalkboard. It doesn’t make you sound smarter and more serious, it makes you sound like an out of touch, Reddit brained dipshit.
I think "data" can be both singular or plural, so both can work. I could be wrong though.
"What do the data say?"
"What does the data say?"
I always treat it like the latter since it's a singular body of datum points. A book isn't a plural collection of pages.
Oh yep, not sure what I was thinking there.
It's a British thing, like how they say aluminum with an extra i
...You mean the correct way to say "aluminium." Whose this aloominum fellow? I don't know him.
Don't tell me you also say "mischievEEous" and "drorring" or that you "go to hospital"
Nope. Australian. We just spell words correctly, then mispronounce everything in speech.
The future is now old man