plural nouns after numbers

Vladv1

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Russian
Home Country
Russian Federation
Current Location
Russian Federation
Dear native speakers, I know that in patterns like "a three-day party", "a five-minute song" we use nouns in singular? (NOT a five-minuteS song). But I remember somebody saying there was an exception where the noun after the number in the pattern similar to the examples I gave was PLURAL. I don't remember the noun itself. Could you please be so kind as to help me out.
 
I can't think of any exception.

You can have twenty 2-meter cables.
 
I don't think there are any exceptions.
 
Is "We have five five-year plans" correct?
It is but it doesn't fit the pattern you're asking about. You're suggesting that there's a noun where "year" comes in that sentence that could be a plural.
 
Dear native speakers, I know that in patterns like "a three-day party", "a five-minute song" we use nouns in singular? (NOT a five-minuteS song).
If I heard "a five-minutes song" or "a three-days party," I would not find the phrases ungrammatical but would, rather, assume that the speaker had chosen to use a slightly archaic, plural possessive construction:

a five minutes' song
a three days' party
 
The only example that I can think of is the "Hundred Years' War" being written without the possessive. It is a common mistake and I found two examples on the first page of a Google search.
 

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