the rich

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norwolf

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Dear teachers.

I know the rich means the rich people, which denotes a group of the same character.
Qestion is whether the rich possibly refers to a particular person.

Thank you in advance. Please.
 

5jj

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No. The rich, the poor, the elderly, etc can be only plural in meaning.
 

norwolf

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No. The rich, the poor, the elderly, etc can be only plural in meaning.
Thank you, fivejedjon.
So does you/your poor always refer to plural people?
We say a poor guy rather than a poor, right?
At the same time, there is the only one exception a sixteen-year-old, isn't there?

I found another one: Now a superstar, she was an unknown only two years ago.
 
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5jj

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So does you/your poor always refer to plural people?
Adjectives are generally used with the noun omitted only after 'the' and 'many/few' and their comparative and superlative forms.

We say a poor guy rather than a poor, right? Yes
At the same time, there is the only one exception a sixteen-year-old, isn't there?
There are a few others. Michael Swan mentions 'accused', 'undersigned', 'deceased', 'former' and 'latter' in his 'Practical English Usage'.
5
 

norwolf

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Oh, I do have the book!
 
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