plural form of "he is an only child"

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ripley

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Hi,
How can I say the plural of

"He is an only child"

They are only children ??????
 
Hi,
How can I say the plural of

"He is an only child" This means that his parents have only one child.

They are only children ?????? This means that they are merely children.[/QUOTE]
The two sentences you have presented have entirely different meanings. In the second, do you mean to say that their parents have no other children?
 
I mean that "they" (for example two boys) have no brothers or sisters; they are both in the same situation; each of them could say that he is an only child.
 
I mean that "they" (for example two boys) have no brothers or sisters; they are both in the same situation; each of them could say that he is an only child.
Aha! Now I've got it. To avoid any ambiguity you'd have to say that "each one (of them) is an only child."
 
If we know that they are from different families, they are only children could work me in the right context.
 
If we know that they are from different families, they are only children could work me in the right context.
I can conceive of it just about working, but I think riquecohen's suggested version is clearer, and, I suspect, more likely.
 
I would have interpreted that as you did - 'just children'
 
I trust your opinion and I know that in my context it was ambiguous; I was just trying to understand if the plural form doesn't exist at all; what about "single-children" as an alternative? Does it work?
Bye
Rip
 
I trust your opinion and I know that in my context it was ambiguous; I was just trying to understand if the plural form doesn't exist at all; what about "single-children" as an alternative? Does it work?
Bye
Rip
Nope. "We are both single children" means that neither of you is married.
 
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