18.3 Further overrides and alternations
(a) Measure phrases
We have already noted that plural measure nominals can be respecified as singular for the purposes of agreement and selection within the NP. This carries over to subject-verb agreement, whether or not there is any marker of singular number within the NP:
[14]
- i. [That ten days we spent in Florida] was fantastic.
i. [That ten days we spent in Florida] was fantastic.
- ii. [Twenty dollars] seems a ridiculous amount to pay to go to the movies.
ii. [Twenty dollars] seems a ridiculous amount to pay to go to the movies.
- iii. [Five miles] is rather more than I want to walk this afternoon.
iii. [Five miles] is rather more than I want to walk this afternoon.
- iv. [Three eggs] is plenty.
iv. [Three eggs] is plenty.
This is the opposite of the collective override: here an NP that is formally plural is conceptualized as referring to a single measure (of time, money, distance, or whatever) and accordingly takes a singular verb. The measure override is characteristically found with be or other complex-intransitive verbs (such as seem in [ii]).
In [ii], where the predicative complement is a singular NP, the override is obligatory (*Twenty dollars seem a ridiculous amount to pay); in [iii-iv] it is optional but quite strongly preferred.