You can't. You just go like we are curious. Curios is an adjective so we are going to need a auxiliary verb before it. Hope it helped! :D
Curious in the plural form is "curious."
The plural of "Polish" can refer to either the people or language of Poland. For people, the plural is "Poles," and for the language, the plural is "Polish."
No, 'insight' is generally used in its singular form. If you want to refer to multiple insights, you can say "pieces of insight" or "various insights."
"Scissors" is typically used as a plural noun to refer to the cutting tool with two blades that are pivoted together. While the term can refer to a single cutting tool in a general sense, it is more commonly used in the plural form.
Yes, "sons" is the plural form of "son." It is used to refer to more than one male child of a parent or parents.
Examples of nouns that are plural in form but singular in meaning include "scissors," "pants," "physics," "politics," and "gymnastics." These words refer to singular items or concepts even though they are grammatically plural.
The word Africans is the plural form. The singular form is African. Some nouns in their plural form can be used to refer to an entire group, like the word Africans. But it is still a plural word.
No, "information" is an uncountable noun and does not typically have a plural form. If needed, you can refer to multiple pieces of information.
You can't. Verbs do not have plural form. Plurals refer to the presence of two or more of something, so are limited to nouns or pronouns.
If you're using cria to refer to a baby llama or related animal, the plural is "crias".
The spelling "quizzers" is a plural form that would refer to persons who quiz, or test.The plural of the word quiz is quizzes.
AnswerThe answer is media (?).Refer http://grammarist.com/usage/media-mediums/
No. The word curious is an adjective. Only nouns and pronouns have plurals in English. If you mean curios, that is the plural of the noun curio.
The word "thieves" is already plural. The singular is "thief."
Mother-of-pearl does not have a plural form; neither does its technical term, nacre.The two terms refer to the internal layer of some mollusc shells, usually described as mother-of-pearl or nacre when speaking of its use for decorative purposes.You could certainly refer to mother-of-pearl shells, or nacreous shells, as a plural form.
It can. You can refer to different coloured wires, or many different types of wire.
No, 'insight' is generally used in its singular form. If you want to refer to multiple insights, you can say "pieces of insight" or "various insights."
The plural of cyclops is cyclops.The plural form of cyclops is cyclopsor cyclopes.