I’d like to take up a very common word that I myself trip over sometimes because of a notion that got stuck in my mind from way back as pretty well standard and logical. That word is “each,” and that persistent notion is that “each” must always be treated as singular no matter how it is positioned or used in a sentence.
The confusion over its usage stems from the very definition of “each” as an adjective—“being one of two or more distinct individuals having a similar relation and often constituting an aggregate.” This obviously marks any noun preceded by “each” as singular, so expectedly, both the verb and any subsequent pronoun for that noun also need to be singular, as in these sentences: “
Each tour guide
needs an intensive job orientation.” “
Each of the female job applicants
was asked about
her marital status.” “
Each of the commercial establishments
has to be equipped with
its own CCTV.”
This very sensible grammar rule has served me well over the years, and I’ve never hesitated to recommend it to anyone asking for advice. As I was to discover much, much later, however, this rule for “each” gets completely overturned when the adjective comes after—not before—a plural subject. In such cases, the verb and any subsequent pronoun of that plural subject must likewise be plural in form: “
Tour guides each need a one-month job orientation.” “
The female job applicants each were asked about
their marital status.” “
The commercial establishments each have to be equipped with
their own CCTV.”
This caveat about “each” when it comes right after a plural subject is provided by the usage notes of the
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language and
Random House Dictionary, and is also indicated by the
Oxford Dictionary in its example for “each” as a determiner (“
They each have their own personality”), so it’s clearly not right to assert that “each” always denotes something singular no matter its position in a sentence.
I say this because in early 2011,
a U.S.-based Filipino reader asked me in the Forum whether this sentence construction is correct: “Those basic interpretive guides
each demonstrate that Exemption 7(C)’s protection for ‘personal privacy’ extends only to individuals.” Unaware of that caveat then, I said the plural verb form “demonstrate” should take the singular form “demonstrates” instead, and suggested that better still, that sentence should be reconstructed as follows:
“Each of those basic interpretive guides
demonstrates that Exemption 7(C)’s protection for ‘personal privacy’ extends only to individuals.” Excellent advice, faulty premise.
(Mea culpa.) The word “each” has two other grammatical quirks that are also worth taking up here. As a pronoun, “each” means “each one,” and the rule is that the verb always takes the singular form when “each” comes immediately before that verb: “
Each hails from a different city.” “The applicants are all qualified, but
each has to pass rigorous medical screening.” Intriguingly, though, English gives much wider latitude for syntax when the adjective “each” follows a verb that has “we” as subject, such that it becomes acceptable to say “
We girls each have our own pet peeves,” or “
We girls have each our own pet peeves,” or even “
We girls have each her own pet peeves.” (When “each” precedes the subject “us girls,” however, the syntax becomes more straightforward:
“Each of us girls has our own pet peeves.”)
There’s just one other grammatical form using “each” that I’d like to take up before I close: “each and every.” Although it looks every inch like a compounding—hence pluralizing—modifier, “each and every” before a noun always needs the singular form of the verb and of subsequent pronouns, as in “
Each and every knowledgeable legislator knows who really orchestrated that bungled mission but
he or she doesn’t dare to say it publicly.”
That’s about all about “each.”
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This essay first appeared in the weekly column “English Plain and Simple” by Jose A. Carillo in The Manila Times
, February 28, 2015 issue © 2015 by Manila Times Publishing. All rights reserved.