All sports enthusiasts use this term, borrowed from à English and has become essential since the end of the 19th century. But how should we make it plural?
There are anglicisms that irritate us, and those to which we no longer even pay attention. For sports fans, there is at least one that is inevitable: the word “match”. If it does have a regularly used synonym, by sports journalists ("encounter"), this word of English origin is absolutely essential when it comes to sporting competitions. However, you probably don't know how to give this term in the plural: do we write "matches" or "matches"?
The two spellings seem to compete in literature and the written press, with authors and journalists alternating between the version with an "e" and the one that does not. Polyglot linguists, attached to the roots and origins of words, prefer to respect English spelling by retaining the “e”, which is pronounced at the end of a word in the language of Shakespeare. Lovers of the French language, who are more conservative, prefer the "" the French", by simply adding an "s" à the end.
200% Deposit Bonus up to €3,000 180% First Deposit Bonus up to $20,000On the French website of the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), we find the spelling "matches". Conversely, on the website of the French Football Federation (FFF), it is the writing of "matches" which is chosen. Le Larousse advises: "Prefer the Frenchified plural, matches, which is also the most common today". But, in his dictionary, it is written: "matches (French plural) or matches (English plural)". So, which spelling is the most correct?
Fortunately, since 1990, the French Academy has decided. Before this date, it was rather respect for the English agreement which predominated. But in the 1990 Report on spelling corrections, academicians expressly recommend writing the plural in the correct form. the French: "matches". The document explains: "Singular and plural of borrowed words: nouns or adjectives of foreign origin have a regular singular and plural: a ravioli, ravioli; a scenario, scenarios; a jazzman, jazzmen, etc. We choose as the form of the singular the most frequent form, even if it is a plural in the other language. These words regularly form their plural with an unpronounced s. (examples: matches, lands).
The word "match" appeared in French from the 16th century. That is, at Originally, an English term used in English. in equestrian sports. It is derived from from the root "gemæcca", which means "mate, companion" ("partner, companion") in Old English of West Germanic origin. Its primary meaning is “the action of equaling, comparing, weighing, competition”.
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