The plural form of a compound noun is determined by the ending of the word. For example:
For compound nouns that are hyphenated or open spaced, the main word is pluralized, for example:
There are also some hyphenated or open faced compound nouns that do not have a main word, in which case, the end word is pluralized, for example:
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∙ 6y agoYes, the plural, compound noun 'raindrops' is a common noun, a general word for individual units of precipitation.
Common nouns can be:singular nouns (friend, island, book)plural nouns (friends, islands, books)concrete nouns (apple, boy, car)abstract nouns (attitude, belief, courage)count nouns (dog, dogs; egg, eggs; flower, flowers)non-count (mass) nouns (oxygen, knowledge, concrete)possessive nouns (the book's cover; the car'stire; the man's shoes)collective nouns (a crowd of peope; a flockof birds; a bouquet of flowers)compound nouns (baseball; hot dog; six-pack)gerund (skiing, fishing, dancing)material nouns (leather, steel, wool)attributive nouns (almond cookies; house pet; flower garden)
Most nouns in English are made into plural nouns by adding an s to the singular form. If the noun ends with an s, ch, sh, or x, an es is added to make the noun plural. When a noun makes its plural form in any other way we speak of irregular plural forms ie. policeman/policemen mouse/mice Hope this helps!
In English the most common way of forming a plural noun is by adding -s to end of the singular.
A compound noun is a word made up of two or more words to form a word with its own meaning. There are three types of compound nouns, closed (bathtub), hyphenated (fifty-five), and open (bus stop).A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing; a proper noun is always capitalized. Examples of compound proper nouns:Queen Elizabeth IIYellowstone (National Park)Coca-Cola
The plural form of the compound noun policewoman is policewomen.Note: The nouns policewoman and policewomen are closed compound nouns.
The rules for making plural compound nouns are the same as the rules for making plural nouns. The ending of the word determines the form of the plural. For example:pole to poles; flagpole to flagpolesway to ways; doorway to doorwaysbaby to babies; crybaby to crybabiesbox to boxes; breadbox to breadboxesknife to knifes; jackknife to jackknives
Examples of compound nouns ending in -in and -on; and their plural forms:afternoon; afternoonsbackspin; backspinsbandwagon; bandwagonsgrandson; grandsonshoneymoon; honeymoonssheepskin; sheepskinssnakeskin; snakeskinstablespoon; tablespoonstailspin; tailspinswatermelon; watermelons
The rules for making plural compound nouns are the same as the rules for making plural nouns. The ending of the word determines the form of the plural. For example:pole to poles; flagpole to flagpolesway to ways; doorway to doorwaysbaby to babies; crybaby to crybabiesbox to boxes; breadbox to breadboxesknife to knifes; jackknife to jackknives
The types of nouns are: Singular or plural nouns Common or proper nouns Concrete or abstract nouns Possessive nouns Collective nouns Compound nouns
A noun must be pluralized before its possessive can be formed because the different endings of plural nouns determines how to form the possessive. The same is true for compound nouns, which form the plural in different ways.Singular possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe s to the end of a noun; for example:apple; apple's coreboy; boy's bicycleclass; class's homeworkDover; Dover's mayorFor plural nouns that end in -s, the possessive are formed by adding an apostrophe after the existing -s; for irregular plural nouns that don't end with -s, the possessive is formed by adding the apostrophe s the same as a singular noun.This is when you need to know how the plural form ends in order to form the plural possessive; for example:the plural noun apples ends with an s, so the possessive is formed by just adding an apostrophe after the existing s: apples' coresbut the plural form for the noun child is children, which does not end with an s; plural nouns that do not end with s are made possessive the same as singular nouns; children'splaygroundplural nouns that do not end with s are called irregular plurals; some other examples of irregular plural possessive nouns are (mouse) mice's tracks or (man) men's shoesCompound nouns can also have different plural forms and must be made plural before determining how its plural possessive is formed; for example:the plural form for the the regular compound noun bedroom is bedrooms, the plural possessive is: bedrooms' doorsthe plural form for the compound noun paint brush is paint brushes, the plural possessive is: paint brushes'bristlesexamples of irregular plural compound nouns are: businessman, the plural is businessmen, the plural possessive is: businessmen's luncheonmother-in-law, the plural is mothers-in-law, the plural possessive is: mothers-in-law's opinionspasserby, the plural is passersby, the plural possessive is: The passersby's attention was drawn by our new sign.
Fire Fly-Fire Flies
Absract, Compound, Collective, Proper, Singular, Plural, Concrete, Possesive
compound,single,plural,abstract,concrete... There are many types of nouns as words
Plural nouns are not capitalized, unless they are proper nouns.
Plural possessive nouns are two or more people, places, or things that show ownership
Kinds of Nouns: singular and plural nouns common and proper nouns abstract and concrete nouns possessive nouns collective nouns compound nouns count and non-count (mass) nouns gerunds (verbal nouns) material nouns (words for things that other things are made from) attributive nouns (nouns functioning as adjectives)