Your Thesaurus will offer many alternate names for a pair, a twin, or a couple.
No. Generally speaking speech is classified into three different persons and subdivided into singular and plural. The first person is I and we (we, being a group containing I). The second person is you, whether that you be one person or a group of people. The third person is: he, she and it (singular) and they (plural) even if "they" refers to a group of objects, such as cars. Accordingly "he" is third person singular.
Yes, it is a plural noun. Objects and things are nouns, and so are the words objects and things.
The plural form for the singular noun jeans is two pairs of jeans.The word jeans is one of a group of words that is a shortened form of 'a pair of...'. Some others are pants, trousers, glasses, binoculars, scissors, tongs, etc. They are all singular that use the plural form, such as two pairs of tongs or two pairs of glasses.
Some nouns that have the same form for singular and plural are:one deer, two deeraircraftsalmontroutsheepswineoffspringpoliceAnother group of nouns are the binary nouns, words that are a shortened form for 'a pair of', for example:one pair of glasses, two pairs of glassesbinocularspantsjeansshortsscissorstweezerstongs
Singular: when talking about one object plural: when talking about multiple objects (singular, single)
Your Thesaurus will offer many alternate names for a pair, a twin, or a couple.
The plural of group is groups.
The word people is a noun, the plural form of the noun person.
Objects IS plural. The singular form is object.
Yes, you should sometimes also make the objects plural. It should be "hands" in your example sentence. However, don't just make every object plural with a plural subject. Only do it when the object is plural. For instance, "The pupils raise a question" ... as a group, they can come up with one question that they want answered... so it shouldn't automatically be "The pupils raise questions." It depends on the situation described by the sentence. Some objects will be plural, but some might not be.
Yes. It's a plural noun to describe a group of objects, which are collectively called vegetables. Same as "vegetable" is a noun.
what is group similar objects
Unos - masculine objects Unas - feminine objects
No. Generally speaking speech is classified into three different persons and subdivided into singular and plural. The first person is I and we (we, being a group containing I). The second person is you, whether that you be one person or a group of people. The third person is: he, she and it (singular) and they (plural) even if "they" refers to a group of objects, such as cars. Accordingly "he" is third person singular.
Yes, it is a plural noun. Objects and things are nouns, and so are the words objects and things.
This is a two part question. Clustering is when you group a set of objects in a way that the objects that are placed in the same group are similar. An example of clustering is the gathering of different populations based on language.
what is group similar objects