'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
I believe it is simply "hope." (when used in an *uncountable* sense, as it usually is - e.g. "have some hope", "Love, hope, and prosperity", "It gives us hope", etc.) The only exception would be when used in a *countable* sense, in which case I believe "hopes" would be correct... e.g. when it might be used synonymously with "desires": i.e. "These are my [specific] hopes and dreams", "My hopes for the new year are to buy a new car, lose weight, ..."
The word 'hopes' is both a verb and a noun: The verb hopes is the third person singular present, plural (hope, hopes, hoping, hoped). The noun hopes is the plural form for the singular noun hope.
The plural form of the noun 'hope' is hopes.Example: I have many hopes for my future.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
I/you/we/they hope. He/she/it hopes. The present participle is hoping.
Yes, "hopes" is the correct spelling.
I believe it is simply "hope." (when used in an *uncountable* sense, as it usually is - e.g. "have some hope", "Love, hope, and prosperity", "It gives us hope", etc.) The only exception would be when used in a *countable* sense, in which case I believe "hopes" would be correct... e.g. when it might be used synonymously with "desires": i.e. "These are my [specific] hopes and dreams", "My hopes for the new year are to buy a new car, lose weight, ..."
gp: gettysburg hope its correct thats what i put i even researched it :)
The word 'hopes' is both a verb and a noun: The verb hopes is the third person singular present, plural (hope, hopes, hoping, hoped). The noun hopes is the plural form for the singular noun hope.
The plural form of the noun 'hope' is hopes.Example: I have many hopes for my future.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
Yes, the noun 'hopes' is a common noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'hope', a general word for a feeling of expectation and desire, a word for a thing.The word hopes is also a verb (hope, hopes, hoping, hoped).
'Tom hopes to do really well on this exam' is a correct sentence. Currently, the sentence is in the future and present tense. To change it to past, change 'hopes' to 'hoped'.
That is the correct spelling of "phrase" (word group, or to use specific words).
The correct phrase is "sufficient proof".
It depends on how you use the phrase: Can you provide me a copy of your CV? - correct
No, the correct phrase is veni vidi vici.