Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • entries
    19
  • comments
    222
  • views
    45,706

75 RBI or 75 RBIs?


Twins Video

Was the long-standing way of referring to 75 RBIs correct or is the new style 75 RBI correct?

I think the first question that needs to be answered is what does RBI stand for? Runs Batted In or Run Batted in?

I maintain that RBI stands for Run Batted in, the singular. You would never say that a player has 1 RBIs or 1 Runs Batted In. But you would say the player had 1 RBI (Run Batted In).

That answers the question of what RBI stands for. Run Batted In. If that were not the case, and RBI stood for Runs Batted In, you could not use the singular. You wouldn’t say, Luis Arraez has 1 Runs Batted In after the season's first game. You would say Luis Arraez has 1 Run Batted In (RBI) after the first game.

With that established, it’s pretty simple. 1 dog, 2 dogs. 1 balloon, 2 balloons. 1 Bicycle, 2 bicycles. And 1 RBI, 2 RBIs, 1 RBI, 50 RBIs, 1 RBI,  75 RBIs.

 

36 Comments


Recommended Comments



dxpavelka

Posted

On this Twins team, this year, 75 is a number that may not matter.  Let's try this again and use the number 71.

h2oface

Posted

RBI. A lot of discussion for something so uninteresting and meaningless to so many, eh?. :go:

Greglw3

Posted

On 8/13/2022 at 3:18 PM, h2oface said:

RBI. A lot of discussion for something so uninteresting and meaningless to so many, eh?. :go:

RBIs have been an important statistic in baseball for well over 100 years, therefore for those who love the game, interesting. Larry Hisle 82 Ribbies at the all-star break, man! Said a fellow player in 1977. Hack Wilson’s absurdly high RBI total was known to most baseball fans....funny I forgot it but it may have been 190-just checked, it was 191! No requirement at all but I recommend a deep dive into baseball history for especially younger baseball fans. This book, to me, is the quintessential book on baseball,  all of it, going back to the 1850s. https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/baseball-an-illustrated-history_geoffrey-c-ward_ken-burns/320783/item/1399830/?gclid=Cj0KCQjw3eeXBhD7ARIsAHjssr8jWhSDIBakBvvsplipclwb5mYpilSbuYNQKlfaQr84HUsvzIZTbwcaAnBsEALw_wcB#idiq=1399830&edition=3422469

LVTwinsfan

Posted

On 7/24/2022 at 4:17 PM, DJL44 said:

The singular and the plural are both RBI. It is Runs Batted In, not Run Batted Ins

Call it what you want, everything doesn’t need to be scrutinized this closely. RBIs is just fine

RpR

Posted

2 hours ago, LVTwinsfan said:

Call it what you want, everything doesn’t need to be scrutinized this closely. RBIs is just fine

I don't not know if that been such a minor aspect with todays youths command of grammar already in the pits.

LVTwinsfan

Posted

1 hour ago, RpR said:

I don't not know if that been such a minor aspect with todays youths command of grammar already in the pits.

You’re kidding right? There is no correct way to pluralize RBI because it’s not a word. 

RpR

Posted

3 hours ago, LVTwinsfan said:

You’re kidding right? There is no correct way to pluralize RBI because it’s not a word. 

No you must be kidding, it is an acronym and there are singular and plural acronyms, you have shown the truth in my statement.

LVTwinsfan

Posted

8 minutes ago, RpR said:

No you must be kidding, it is an acronym and there are singular and plural acronyms, you have shown the truth in my statement.

Ok fine you win, so RBIs is correct then

LVTwinsfan

Posted

4 hours ago, RpR said:

I don't not know if that been such a minor aspect with todays youths command of grammar already in the pits.

RBIs
RBI is an acronym, thus a noun: singular RBI, plural RBIs. If you want to say the words, say them, don't use the acronym. You would not use the plural for 'an RBI double' to say 'runs batted in double' meaning one run.
RpR

Posted

53 minutes ago, LVTwinsfan said:
RBIs
RBI is an acronym, thus a noun: singular RBI, plural RBIs. If you want to say the words, say them, don't use the acronym. You would not use the plural for 'an RBI double' to say 'runs batted in double' meaning one run.

 I am wrong in simply calling it an acronym, an acronym is a word and RBI is not a word, so I had grab my college rules of correct grammar and:  -  Most readers probably know that an acronym is an invented word made up of the initial letters or syllables of other words, like NASA or NATO. Fewer probably know that an initialism is a type of acronym that cannot be pronounced as a word, but must be read letter-by-letter, like FBI or UCLA.

But even at that , in correct grammar, in an acronym the vowel is the plural form, so there is not s in a plural version, but as English is one of the few languages where the verb most often comes before the noun, for the verb to follow screws with most peoples minds

solomon1930

Posted

On 8/15/2022 at 8:39 PM, LVTwinsfan said:
RBIs
RBI is an acronym, thus a noun: singular RBI, plural RBIs. If you want to say the words, say them, don't use the acronym. You would not use the plural for 'an RBI double' to say 'runs batted in double' meaning one run.

LOL


Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...