"Comics" in my sentence

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Rachel Adams

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If I have a plural noun like "comics" should it be:

"Comics are an art form" or "Comics is an art form", "Comics are art" or "Comics is art?"
If I am not mistaken, "Comics are an art form" and "Comics are art" are wrong.
 
Are you talking about the whole publication (the physical item you buy) or the artwork used inside comics?
 
Are you talking about the whole publication (the physical item you buy) or the artwork used inside comics?

About the arts works.
 
Are you talking about the whole publication (the physical item you buy) or the artwork used inside comics?

About the arts works.

It's usually a good idea to assume that a native speaker has used the correct word/spelling/terminology. Why did you not just copy the word from my question instead of (incorrectly) changing it to "arts works"?
 
It's usually a good idea to assume that a native speaker has used the correct word/spelling/terminology. Why did you not just copy the word from my question instead of (incorrectly) changing it to "arts works"?

I accidentally typed it separately.
 
You didn't just type it separately. You divided it into two words and then you added an "s" to the end of each word. That's not an accident.
 
If I have a plural noun like "comics" should it be:

"Comics are an art form" or "Comics is an art form", "Comics are art" or "Comics is art?"
If I am not mistaken, "Comics are an art form" and "Comics are art" are wrong.
You can make a case for both is and are.

I prefer are, but I won't defend it.

And yes, artwork is one word and is singular in this context.
 
You can make a case for both is and are.

I prefer are, but I won't defend it.

And yes, artwork is one word and is singular in this context.

I was studying collective nouns that take either a singular or a plural verb. I was not sure if "comics" and "cartoons" are also used in the same way as "family", " crew", "crowd", etc.
 
I was studying collective nouns that take either a singular or a plural verb. I was not sure if "comics" and "cartoons" are also used in the same way as "family", " crew", "crowd", etc.
Cartoons is never a collective noun. I don't know whether comics is. I don't think of it that way, which is why I prefer are.
 
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