Which of the following sentences is correct?

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sweetie123

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Hi,

Which of the following sentences is correct?

1) Site visit of Chemical & Gas Plants was done by M/s Technical Support Company on Monday, April 4, 2011 at 2:00 pm.

2) Site visit of Chemical & Gas Plants were done by M/s Technical Support Company on Monday, April 4, 2011 at 2:00 pm.

Thanks.
 
Sentence 2 is appropriate & correct.
 
Why not sentence 1? "Site visit" is singular and the fact that it was done on a definite time also allows us to consider it single and use "was" with it.

Perhaps sentence 2 is also correct (you might think of "plants" which is plural), but I prefer sentence 1 for the reasons I mentioned.
 
Why not sentence 1? "Site visit" is singular and the fact that it was done on a definite time also allows us to consider it single and use "was" with it.

Perhaps sentence 2 is also correct (you might think of "plants" which is plural), but I prefer sentence 1 for the reasons I mentioned.
I agree with your interpretation for #1. Chemical and Gas Plants, as written with capital letters. appears to be the name of a company. If so, #2 is not correct.
The sentence, IMO, would read better as "A site visit to... was made on..."
 
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*** Not a teacher ***

I am confused - in my opinion #1 is correct - singular noun, singular verb. Is this a British English / American English issue?

Also, I agree that an "A" to start the sentence is needed.
 
IF:
You made ONE visit, and during that visit saw multiple plants -- use the singular form of the verb.

You made MANY visits, each to its own plant -- change the word to visits, and use the plural form of the verb.
 
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A comment on something else:

If you were visiting two plants -- a Chemical one and a Gas one -- you need to write out "and":
Chemical and Gas Plants = you visited two kind of plants


& is used only when it's part of a company name, otherwise the word and has be spelled out in writing. So your phrase -- Chemical & Gas Plants -- suggests you visited several plants owned by a company called "Chemical & Gas".
 
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