You searched for: “people
people
This entry is located in the following unit: popu- (page 1)
people, persons
people (PEE puhl) (noun)
Large groups or an undetermined number of individuals: Thousands of people attended the annual book fair.
persons (PUR suhnz) (noun)
A relatively small or exact number of individuals: There were only fifty persons who won prizes.

The plural of person is usually people except in formal or legal contexts, where the plural is often persons.

The words people and persons both refer to a number of individuals and are used interchangeably in most contexts.

No safe rule exists for choosing between people and persons except possibly what is expressed in the definitions as shown above. Since both words are in the plural format, neither term can be used to refer to an individual.

—Compiled from information presented by
Harry Shaw in Dictionary of Problem Words and Expressions;
McGraw-Hill Book Company; New York; 1987; page 271.

Of all the people in the great hall, only five persons were selected to make speeches.

More possibly related word entries
Units related to: “people
(Greek: man, mankind; human beings; including, males (man, men; boy, boys) and females (woman, women; girl, girls); all members of the human race; people, humanity)
(Greek: people, race, tribe, nation; group of people living together; community, family)
(Greek: mob [people])
(Maasai of Kenya)
(Latin: people)
(Latin: people, belonging to the people, concerning people, population)
(Latin: a suffix; a person who, the thing which; people who, things which)
(a suffix which forms nouns that refer to people who regularly engage in some activity, or who are characterized in a certain way, as indicated by the stem or root of the word; originally, which appeared in Middle English in words from Old French where it expressed an intensive degree or with a pejorative or disparaging application)
(an important symbol for many people)
(Part 4 of 4: more historical incidents about smoking and what happens to people who smoke)
(Latin: common, universal, public; multitude and common people)
(Latin: assembly; group of people, meeting)
(lists of "A" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "B" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "C" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "D" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "E" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "F" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "G" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "H" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "I" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "J" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "K" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "L" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "M" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "N" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "O" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "P" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "Q" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "R" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "S" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "T" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "U" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "V" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "W" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "X" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "Y" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(lists of "Z" sections that are organized into what for some people are confusing groups of words)
(Latin: striving to equal; rivaling or competing with; imitate, imitating; trying to do something as well as or better than another system, person, or other people)
(words which originated from the names of people, things, and places)
(interactions between people and animals)
(Latin: pertaining to the Teutonic people of central Europe [possibly from a Celtic word meaning "neighbor"], similar to Old Irish gair, "neighbor"; pertaining to Germany)
(Greek: old age, old man, old people; elder, elderly; senior citizen)
(Hindu: references to a wandering race of people who have called themselves and their language Romany)
(electronic chips are being placed under the skins of people and animals)
(a normal behavior when induced in most “normal people” under suitable conditions)
(influences on humanity including those from the past and the present)
(People who made a difference, 1943-58, San Francisco)
(Latin > French: done in exchange; reciprocal; with the same feelings or relationships; shared by two people or groups, in common with each other)
(Latin: foot, feet; people often see this ped element in other words. When people refer to "pedal extremities", they mean "feet". When anyone pushes the pedals of a bicycle, it is done with the feet. A pedestrian must use the feet for walking. A quadruped has four feet while a centipede has "100 feet"; or a large number of them because it may be impossible to count all of them.)
(Latin: common people, common multitude; as opposed to the patricians [upper-class citizens] of Roman times)
(a couple of similar opinions about people who borrow books)
(some things are not as obvious as we may think they are even with people who seem to be so well off, according to Edwin Arlington Robinson and Franklin P. Adams)
(Greek: a person who crouches; than extended to a beggar, poor; paupers; modernized meanings: street people, homeless, vagrant, living in poverty)
(suggestions; one of those situations where most people prefer to give than to receive)
(robotic devices that work like humans making people unnecessary)
(something written by people who were not there at the time; the art of reconciling fact with fiction or making guesses about things that can not be verified.)
(medium of exchange of thoughts and ideas between people; the storehouse of accumulated knowledge through the centuries)
(medium of exchange of thoughts and ideas between people; the storehouse of accumulated knowledge through the centuries)
(that age when people prefer siestas to fiestas)
(conduct of public affairs for private advantages; people who have the gift of gab and the gift of grab)
(something people get tired of hearing someone say, "I told you it would happen.")
(a form of word humor when people fiddle with words and laugh at the resultant loony tunes: Considered by some to be the lowest form of humus, earthy wit that we all dig and often respond to with groans and moans)
(a form of word humor when people fiddle with words and laugh at the resultant loony tunes; considered by some to be the lowest form of humus, earthy wit, that we all dig and often respond to with groans and moans)
(a belief that teaches people to spend the best parts of their lives preparing to avoid the worst that could come after this life)
(a field in which scientists try to prolong the lives of people so they will have time to pay for the gadgets that are invented for them)
(presentations of living conceptions; the medium of exchange for thoughts and ideas between people)
(presentations of living conceptions; the medium of exchange for thoughts and ideas between people)
(a four-letter and a five-letter word that are avoided by many people)
(words which identify Roman terms referring to people and other topics; especially, those appearing in Those about to Die)
(Latin: Chinese, from Medieval Latin Sinicus, "Chinese", from Sina, "China", from Late Latin Sinae, "the Chinese"; Sino-, "Chinese people, language, etc.")
("The Emperor's New Clothes" by Hans Christian Andersen is a fable about the pitfalls of political self-aggrandizement and the fear of people to face reality even when they know that the reality of the situation is untrue)
(Were the Vandals as bad as some people have indicated?)
(Latin: common people, multitude, common)
(Pets can give people so many things: love, attention, entertainment, company; as well as, infection)
Word Entries containing the term: “people
A committee is a group of people who keep minutes and waste hours.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 1)
Chickens, which are raised for eggs and meat, are the most popular animals that are eaten by people before they become little babies (as eggs) and after they are older and butchered for food.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 2)
Diplomacy is the art of getting other people to do it your way.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 3)
Electricity is essential for many people

Electricity is both a basic part of nature and one of our most widely used global forms of energy

Electricity is actually a secondary energy source known as an energy carrier. This means we get electricity from the conversion of other sources of energy; such as, coal, nuclear, wind, water power, solar energy, etc.

These sources of energy for electricity are called primary sources and the energy sources used to make electricity can be renewable or non-renewable, but electricity itself is neither renewable nor nonrenewable.

Electricity use has resulted in dramatic changes in the way our world exists because before electricity became available over 100 years ago, houses had no light at night or people used candles, then kerosene lamps. Food was cooled in iceboxes (or not at all), and rooms were warmed by wood-burning or coal-burning stoves.

Many scientists and inventors have worked to decipher the principles of electricity since the 1600s and notable accomplishments were made by Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, and Nikola Tesla.

Today, scientists are still studying electricity and learning more about it. They've learned that all citizens need to practice good safety habits, since electricity can be very dangerous.

Benjamin Franklin demonstrated that lightning is electricity, Thomas Edison invented the first long-lasting incandescent light bulb and Nikola Tesla discovered the principles of alternating electricity currents.

Before 1879, direct current (DC) electricity was used in arc lights for outdoor lighting. In the late 1800's, Nikola Tesla pioneered the generation, transmission, and use of alternating current (AC) electricity, which reduced the cost of transmitting electricity over long distances.

Tesla's inventions used electricity to bring indoor lighting to our homes and to power industrial machines.

In spite of the fact that electricity is important in the daily lives of people in industrialized nations, few probably stop to think what life would be like without electricity.

Regrettably, too many people in the world are still deprived of the pleasures and advantages of having access to electricity.

Like air and water, people who have normal use of electricity tend to take it for granted; even though they use electricity to do so many tasks every day; from lighting, heating, and cooling their homes to powering their televisions, kitchen equipment, computers, and other appliances run by electricity.

About the only time users of electricity really appreciate their electrical power and what it does is when it is cut off by storms or by some other abnormal situation.

—Compiled from various sources as seen in this
Electronic Bibliography page.

This entry is located in the following unit: electro-, electr-, electri- (page 22)
feces in the news, having no toilets harming billions of people

A lack of toilets is severely jeopardizing the health of 2.6 billion people in the developing world who are forced to discard their excrement, or feces, in bags, buckets, fields, and ditches.

"The lack of a safe, private, and convenient toilet is a daily source of indignity and undermines health, education, and income generation," according to Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty, and the Global Water Crisis, a report commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Much of Europe and North America built sanitation systems in the 1800s to keep humans and their drinking water away from pathogen-bearing fecal matter that can transmit cholera, diarrhea, typhoid, and parasites.

Nearly every other person in the developing world today lacks access to improved sanitation, and 1.1 billion people, one-sixth of the world's population, get their water from sources contaminated by human and animal feces, the report says.

—From "Lack of Toilets Harming Health of Billions, UN Report Says"
by Kelly Hearn for National Geographic News;
Published, November 15, 2006.
This entry is located in the following unit: feco-, fec-, faeco-, faec-, feci- + (page 2)
Jury: Twelve people who too often determine which client has the best lawyer.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 4)
Knowledge: People and Their Influences
Influences on humanity from the past and in the present.
Memoir #3: Robert Martin; People Who Made a Difference
Memoir, People Who Made a Difference, 1943-58, San Francisco.
This entry is located in the following unit: Memoir Directory: Bob Martin (page 1)
Mosquitoes are insects that make people prefer flies.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 5)
Since light travels faster than sound, some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 5)
Some people cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 5)
Toothache is the pain that drives some people to extraction.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 6)
Warehouse: What some people ask when they are lost.
When people die, arrangements are made to barium.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 6)