Phenomena has been in occasional use as a singular since the early 18th century, as has the plural phenomenas. Our evidence shows that singular phenomena is primarily a speech form used by poets, critics, and professors, among others, but one that sometimes turns up in edited prose.
In modern philosophical use, the term phenomena means things as they are experienced through the senses and processed by the mind as distinct from things in and of themselves (noumena).
PHENOMENA definition: a plural of phenomenon. See examples of phenomena used in a sentence.
No está permitido acceder a las instalaciones con patinetes eléctricos, bicicletas ni monopatines. de todos los eventos y novedades de Phenomena.
Real phenomena must be viewed in terms of as many dimensions as possible because they exist simultaneously in an infinite number of them. When change in the phenomena of interest is the object of scientific study, the scientists are said to be studying the behavior of the phenomena.
- a fact, occurrence, or circumstance observed or observable: the phenomena of nature. 2. something that is remarkable or extraordinary. 3. a remarkable or exceptional person; prodigy. 4. Philos. a. an appearance or immediate object of awareness in experience.
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Phenomena is the plural of phenomenon. But what sets the two phenomena apart is how they form. Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Although phenomena is often treated as if it were singular, correct usage is to employ phenomenon with a singular construction and phenomena with a plural: that is an interesting phenomenon (not phenomena); several new phenomena were recorded in his notes