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Poll: The wages of sin ____ death.

The wages of sin ____ death.

is
are

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This Poll:

  • Votes: 3,106
  • Comments: 34
  • Added: March 2005

Comments:

Not sure

Why 'is'?

Deen

Indeed, why?

wagesofsin

It's in the Bible

Brittany

The wages of sin are really what???
TELL ME

san

If you search in the dictionary, you will find out:
wage = noun [sing.] (also wages [pl.]) a regular amount of money that you earn, usually every week, for work or service
Then the word WAGES is plural, so the correct answer is ARE

^

Not in this case- it's singular. Damnation is not the same as a salary.

MrTrilby

Yet another thing the Bible gets wrong.

gardemarine

It is 'is' because the sentence defines what is death. We can rephrase this sentence as "Death is the wages of sin". What is death? It is the wages of sin.

Stryfe

Just because the Bible said it or it was translated that way doesn't mean it's grammatically correct. Wages can't be singular. It isn't in any other case, and the Bible doesn't get special cases. It's literature like any other.

Lynque

Hey!
God said it.
I believe it.
That settles it!

SimonTrew

It is singular because "wages" here is functioning as singular. You would happily have "the pay of sin is death" or "the reward of sin is death"-- and in the alternate, "the rewards of sin are death". It's impossible to match the number here, so one must take a pragmatic approach. Since "is" is the established form, stet.

Bartleby

VERY INTERESTING that 58% (at the time I took the poll) prefer "is". I can think of two reasons for this. 1) The sentence is always written using "is". That's the norm and, by definition, most of us adhere to the norm. 2) It's biblical. The religious among us (and there are many) are inclined to accept statements from the Bible as a literal translation. So "is" it is.

I voted for "are" because "wages" in every case but this one is used as a plural noun. (Wages are paid on Friday.) Also, "are" falls more softly on the eye and ear, making it aesthetically, if not technically, correct.

I was curious what one of my favorite reference sites, dictionary.com, had to say on the subject. It says that "wages" (can be) used with a singular or plural verb." It gives "The wages of sin is death" as an example, but doesn't declare that form of the verb as the only option.

I did a little more research, with my MS Word Grammar Checker. It allows the sentence with either "is" or "are"; however, the suggested change for "The wages of sin am death" is "is". (Lousy traditionalist Microsoft!)

sunhr575

"is" , notional concord, while "are", grammatical concord. as NNS, I prefer the latler.lol.

dawnngcm

sin is abstract noun

Madison

This is why I hate our language. Also, I have to wonder which came first: the translation, or the exclusion of "wages" from standard subject-verb agreement rules.

John McMullen

Subject-verb agreement indicates the verb should be "is" (and we don't have verb-object agreement in English). You can make the argument that here "wages" is a notional singular, but the word doesn't get used that way anywhere else that I'm aware of (you say, "The pay is a thousand dollars" but "The wages are a thousand dollars").

Granted that the King James Bible deliberately used archaic language, but I don't think this is an example of that usage.

King James

It wasn't archaic when they did the King James Bible; it's archaic now.

Random Guy

The greek word for "wages" is in the plural form. However, in English, the word "wages" was historically used as a singular (implying a plural dollar sum but a singular payment). The word "is" is necessary for the English construction but it is not required for the Greek construction (Oh, the joys of translation). When it was first translated into English, "wages is" was considered the correct English form. Since then, every Bible scholar appears to have learned this verse very early on in their religious life and have continued to translated it using is (because, it's always been done that way). Nevertheless, English language has changed and the correct translation into modern English is "are" (and that's one of the few instances in English when "is" and "are" come next to one another in a grammatically correct way!)

Jillian

The wages of sin is death. That's my anwser! What's yours?

Abhijeet Jadhav

Wages means punishments when used in singular.

The wages of sin is death. This sentence is grammatically correct.

Allen

In the case above, the answer is "The wages of sin are death." In the Romans, Paul uses the prepositional phrase "For the wages of sin." In that case the subject is singular because the preposition "for" is singular. The original question leaves out the whole text of Romans. In this case those two little letters make all the difference, but many have memorized it wrongly and forget about the "for."

Paul

It's got nothing to do with the preposition. 'Wages' here means retribution/recompense and is used in the singular despite the plural ending.

Raj

for sin it take singular verb and for remuneration it take plural verb.

Kasey

When the passage was first translated into English, "wages" was singular. Many words in English are singlar despite ending in "s". Also, the word "wages" had a slightly different mraning then thsn now. If translated today, it would read, " The payment of the eages of sin is death." It still is "is".

Carlyn

I have been mulling this over in my mind for awhile. I thought it should be 'are' also, but then decided that the Bible must be correct. I didn't think that a prepositional phrase, "For the wages", "of sin" could be the subject of a sentence, so I tried rephrasing the sentence to 'Death is the wages of sin." I knew that the subject of a sentence is sometimes found in the predicate. That's my two cents worth! I agree with gardemarie.

Helen Stengel

The comment by Random Guy gets my vote here. In the time of King James, it seems, 'wages' was used in a singular sense, but nowadays it's plural. I find it perplexing that so many of these commentators seem to think 'The Bible' was originally written in King James English! KJ English or not, though, I applaud their reverence for the word of God.

narinder

According to oxford dictionary wages is plural form of wage

punnet

The wages of sin are death correct sentence because wages is the plural form of wage

Yahweh

This sentence is taken from the Bible, and the verb is used in the singular.

Urooj Mushtaq

b/c here it is being used as a reward. the reward of sin is death.

Pankaj Brijwasi

Please change it into direct speech and tell me the answer

Kc

Only one payment of death >> singular - ?

Jerome

The Vulgate reads: "Stipendia enim peccati, mors."
Stipendia is a Nominative plural neuter noun.
The correct translation seems to be "The wages, indeed, of sin, are death." However, the Douay-Rheims translates it with the English "is." The King James concours with this translation.

Ali Ahmed

Is

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