1 Nephi 15:36 Textual Variants

Royal Skousen
whose fruit is most precious and most desirable of all other [ fruits 01ABCDEFGHIKLMNOPQRST|fruit J]

The 1888 LDS large-print edition replaced the plural fruits with the singular. Since this edition was never used as a copy-text for later editions, the plural fruits has been retained in all subsequent LDS editions. Usually English speakers treat the word fruit as a mass noun rather than as a count noun, but occasionally the plural count noun fruits occurs in the original text of the Book of Mormon. In the King James Bible, the plural use is quite frequent (as in Matthew 7:20: “wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them”).

In 1 Nephi 8:1, we have the plural fruits in the phrase “the seeds of fruits”. This phrase appears nowhere else in the text. But for a number of other expressions, we get variation within the earliest textual readings, usually with the singular mass noun fruit dominating. In this particular instance, we see that for the phrase “all other fruit(s)”, we get the plural only once, namely here in 1 Nephi 15:36:

all other fruit (3 times) / all other fruits (1 time)

For other phrases, fruit is usually more frequent than fruits, but not always:

all manner of fruit (3 times) / all manner of fruits (1 time)

much fruit (11 times, with 8 examples from Jacob 5) / much fruits (1 time)

fruit of one’s labor (1 time) / fruits of one’s labors (3 times)

Because of this variation, we let the earliest textual sources determine for each case whether the reading should be a singular mass noun (such as fruit) or a plural count noun (such as fruits).

Summary: Retain the plural count noun fruits in 1 Nephi 15:36 (“most desirable of all other fruits”), even though in the three other occurrences of this phrase we get the singular mass noun fruit; when dealing with mass versus count nouns, we generally let the earliest textual reading determine for each instance the number of the noun.

Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, Part. 1

References