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If I wanted to say, There are three twos in the English language . . . OED does use the spelling twos: A 2 d two and two, two by two, formerly also by two and two: in groups or sets of two; two at a time; by twos BUT you're not talking about the word two You're talking about homophones of the word two — to, too and two You can't say "There are three twos ", because there aren't [Well, two is listed as noun, adjective and adverb, so I suppose there are, but
Meaning of twos and ones and ones and twos - English Language Usage . . . The exact sequence twos and ones and ones and twos doesn't even occur once in all the millions of books indexed in Google Books And it only gets 3 hits on the entire Internet (Google obviously hasn't yet indexed this new ELU question itself! :) The collocation obviously has no established meaning, so it's basically a matter of opinion (plus knowledge of the exact context, which I don't have)
The origin of two is company, three is a crowd The common saying two is company, three's a crowd is often associated with a romantic context: Prov A way of asking a third person to leave because you want to be alone with someone (Often
What are the twos? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I am a British English native speaker, and I've heard a few references in American media to broadcasts of "x (typically traffic) on the 2s" Google does not reveal any useful information on exactly
Word for lights on police cars, etc - English Language Usage Stack . . . 3 Blues and twos create an interesting atmosphere at night Although British, and arguably informal, blues and twos refers to the lights and sirens together blues and twos NOUN British informal 1 The flashing lights and siren used on a police car or other emergency vehicle when responding to an incident Also later "on (also under) blues and
Origin of going number 1 or number 2 in the bathroom I was wondering about the origin of using the terms "number one" and "number two" for going to the bathroom (for those unaware, number one is urinating, number two is defecating, at least in the US
Plural of numbers (as nouns) - English Language Usage Stack Exchange It turns out that different people, and different cultures, express arithmetic calculations differently "Four twos make an eight" is a reasonable thing to say when explaining multiplication of 4 times 2, but it's not the only way As for plurals, treat the digits as nouns - ones, twos, threes, fours, fives, Ignore apostrophe plurals in dealing with arithmetic; in fact, avoid apostrophes
Which ones correct - this two or these two? I’m aware that ‘this’ is used for a singular thing while ‘these’ is used for plural However, I also see people who use the phrase ‘this two’ so I’m not sure which one’s correct