The plural of laundry is laundries.
But only for the plural of laundry as a business or service (e.g. coin laundries).
Laundry (clothes to be washed) is an uncountable noun.
The noun laundry as a word for a business is singular. The plural form is laundries.The noun laundry as a word for clothes to be washed is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
'is' is correct. 'are' would be used for the plural form which is laundries.
The second person, personal pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural, for example:Jack, you do not mind doing the laundry.Kids, you do not mind doing the laundry.
The spelling "dryer" is a variant of "drier". The primary use in most cases is for the appliance that dries clothes (e.g. clothes dryer), whereas the spelling drier is more commonly used to indicate comparative dryness (e.g. drier air).
The nurses' uniforms were washed by the laundry service.
The noun laundry as a word for a business is singular. The plural form is laundries.The noun laundry as a word for clothes to be washed is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
The noun laundry as a word for a business is singular. The plural form is laundries.The noun laundry as a word for clothes to be washed is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
Yes, but only for the plural of laundry as a business or service (e.g. coin laundries). Laundry (clothes to be washed) is an uncountable noun.
'is' is correct. 'are' would be used for the plural form which is laundries.
The second person, personal pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural, for example:Jack, you do not mind doing the laundry.Kids, you do not mind doing the laundry.
The spelling "dryer" is a variant of "drier". The primary use in most cases is for the appliance that dries clothes (e.g. clothes dryer), whereas the spelling drier is more commonly used to indicate comparative dryness (e.g. drier air).
The nurses' uniforms were washed by the laundry service.
The plural of policeman is policemen.The plural possessive of player is policemen's(apostrophe before the S).E.g. The policemen's uniforms were ruined in the laundry.
The nouns 'washer' and 'dryer' are singularnouns. The plural forms are 'washers' and 'dryers'. Examples:We bought a new washer and dryer.The laundry room in our building has three washers and dryers.
When there is a plural subject, you would use "do", which is the plural form of the verb. "Does" is used for a singular subject. Examples of a singular subject: "Mike does the laundry" and "Does Kim know about this?" Examples of two subjects (a plural subject): "Mike and Julie do the crossword puzzle together" and "Do Kim and Larry know about this?"
a basket that is used for laundry
laundry man?laundry cleaner?dry cleaner?not sure too