"Zz" <a@b.c> wrote in message
news:i1bjb.6796$pz5.1035255@newsfep2-win.server.ntli.net...
> They are both grammatical.
> #1 is the only choice where there is only one father (of all the boys)
> #2 more generally when there are several fathers (each one the father of
one
> or more of the boys, but not all)
>
> In answer to your query about each boy having more than one father:
> No. Unless the context was some kind of dream sequence, this situation is
> absurd/impossible and so it would not generally be interpreted as such.
> However, when you replace "fathers" with "cats", for instance, this
> interpretation is okay.
However, in real life these grammar prescriptions are often ignored; the
meaning is usually self-evident.
:-)
> "nh1980" <nh1980@thematrix.com> wrote in message
> news:vopk9028mt5nbe@corp.supernews.com...
> > Which is correct?
> >
> > #1) All the boys should go with their father?
> >
> > #2) All the boys should go with their fathers?
> >
> > In question #1, it implies that all boys have the same father? Is this
> > assumption correct?
> > In question #2, it implies that all the different boys have different
> > fathers? Is this correct? It can also imply each one has more than one
> > father?
>
>
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