All nouns name persons, places, or things. That's the definition of "noun".
Some of them are singular and some of them are plural.
True. Nouns that name a person, place, or thing can be singular (referring to one) or plural (referring to more than one).
All nouns name persons, places, or things. That's... kind of the definition of "noun".
Some of them are singular and some of them are plural.
Verb tenses do not have singular or plural forms; they convey actions that happened in the past, are happening in the present, or will happen in the future. The subject of the sentence determines whether the verb is singular or plural.
True. A noun or pronoun is singular when it refers to one item, person, or thing.
Was is singular and applies to one person.Were is plural and applies to more than one person. (except in singular "you were")eg I was ready, but you three were not ready."Were" is also the past subjunctive of the verb "to be" for all personsi.e. "If I were in charge, I would fire her." "If she were here, you would see her." "I wish I were rich."WAS is singular and WERE is plural.
True. When making a singular noun plural, the spelling often changes. This can involve adding -s, -es, or -ies to the end of the word, or changing the internal vowel or consonant.
"Some" is usually used as a plural or non-count noun. To use it as a singular subject, you can combine it with a singular noun or pronoun. For example, "Some people is looking for a new job" instead of "Some people are looking for a new job."
The term 'false feet' is the plural form; the singular form is 'false foot'.
Verb tenses do not have singular or plural forms; they convey actions that happened in the past, are happening in the present, or will happen in the future. The subject of the sentence determines whether the verb is singular or plural.
Sorry, but that's false!
True!
True. When making a singular noun plural, the spelling often changes. This can involve adding -s, -es, or -ies to the end of the word, or changing the internal vowel or consonant.
Was is singular and applies to one person.Were is plural and applies to more than one person. (except in singular "you were")eg I was ready, but you three were not ready."Were" is also the past subjunctive of the verb "to be" for all personsi.e. "If I were in charge, I would fire her." "If she were here, you would see her." "I wish I were rich."WAS is singular and WERE is plural.
False. There are quite a few irregular plurals in English, such as man/men, child/children, life/lives, mouse/mice, goose/geese, cactus/cacti -- and for some nouns (e.g. fish, deer moose) the same word can be used as both singular and plural.
False. A compound subject containing a plural noun takes a plural verb form, for example: Jane or the boys are able to pick up grandma. Neither Jane nor the boys are able to pick up grandma. Jane is able to pick up grandma. Jane or Frank is able to pick up grandma. Neither Jane nor Frank is able to pick up grandma. The boys are able to pick up grandma.
Alveoli is simply the plural form of alveolus.Alveolus = singularAlveoli = plural
True. A noun or pronoun is singular when it refers to one item, person, or thing.
The singular falsa and the plural false in the feminine and the singular falso and the plural falsiin the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "phony." Context makes clear whether the falseness emanates from a feminine (cases 1, 2), masculine (examples 3, 4) or mixed feminine and masculine (instance 4) audience. The respective pronunciations will be "FAL-sa" or "FAL-sey" in the feminine and "FAL-so" or "FAL-see" in the masculine in Italian.
False. Asthma isn't contagious.