daot ka
The nouns in the sentence are liberty and death.
taba si jason
A singular subject must have a singular verb, and a plural subject must have a plural verb. When the subject is joined by "and," use a plural verb. Use a singular verb with singular indefinite pronouns like "everyone" or "nobody." Collective nouns can take a singular or plural verb depending on the context. Make sure to match the verb with the closest subject when using phrases like "along with" or "as well as."
There isn't one - plural is a verb.
Sure! One example is "mouse" which becomes "mice" in its plural form. Another example is "kangaroo" which becomes "kangaroos" in the plural form.
deer, fish, sheep, grass
Count nouns are nouns that have both a singular and a plural form. Some examples are:I brought a bag of apples to give you each an apple.I often ride my bike with the other kids who have bikes.We took a tour of cities but the city we liked best was Paris.The teacher gives us homework but not as much as other teachers.
No, such nouns are treated as singular. For example, give me a glass of beer. Glass ends in s, but you still say "a glass" indicating the singlular.
give a short paragraph using collective nouns
If you are referring to countable nouns, those are nouns that have a plural. Book, girl, school, horse... these all can be counted. Five books. Twenty girls. Three schools. Two horses. But some nouns have no plural. They are called non-countable (or non-count) nouns. "Information" and "research" are two examples.
'to give' = dar doy - I give das - you (single, informal) give damos - we give dais - you (informal, plural) dan - you (formal, plural)/they give da - you (formal, singular/he/she gives