They have lost their job(s)

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gionorton

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I am wondering if I should use : 1)People have lost their jobs 2) people have lost their job . what's the difference between them? could anyone explain it to me in a clear way?
 
I would take "their job" to mean "a single job shared by all of them".

Not a teacher.
 
1 person 1 job
2 people 2 jobs
 
1 person 1 job
2 people 2 jobs
Maybe in an ideal world! Besides I think you could say either 'job' or 'jobs', and the context would make it clear.
And if a company is downsizing, "Everyone is afraid they will lose their job" doesn't refer to only one potential job loss.
 
I am not a teacher.

I get your point but I don't think it's a good example.

"Everyone" is singular and the use of "their" is just a way of avoiding the his/hers dilemma without it actually being a plural.

If a company is downsizing I would probably say, "All of the employees are afraid they will lose their jobs."
 
"Everyone" is singular and the use of "their" is just a way of avoiding the his/hers dilemma without it actually being a plural.
Exactly. Or to put it in a non-PC terms. "Everyone is afraid of losing his job", and in the context, this doesn't apply to the potential loss of only one job - hence my point that, as long as it's grammatical, the actual sentence doesn't matter much because the context is of more importance.
 
In the first sentence "one's" refers back to "one". That is correct.

In Raymott's sentence "one's" would be referring back to "everyone". That is not correct.
 
In Raymott's sentence "one's" would be referring back to "everyone". That is not correct.
Where did I write that? I don't think I've used "one's" in the whole thread.
 
Where did I write that? I don't think I've used "one's" in the whole thread.

No, you haven't.
Mike was just responding to Matthew's last question.
He (=Mike) didn't mean what you wrote is incorrect.
:-D
 
Tzfujimino is correct.
 
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