Ignore the "a." The only vowel in the word is a long "o," as in "hole," "toll," or "oh." The "e" is silent.
It is pronounced as "lohvz."
The base word for "loaves" is "loaf."
The plural form for the noun loaf is loaves; the plural possessive form is loaves'.Consider this example:The chef complained that the loaves' crusts were too thick.
Yes, "loaves" is a noun. It is the plural form of "loaf," which refers to a quantity of bread that is shaped and baked in one piece.
The plural of loaf is loaves. Some, but not all words ending in F change it to a V and add -es to form the plural (thief-thieves, hoof-hooves).
pronounce it as "eat" girl
ome collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves.
ome collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves.
50+50+16
Yes, the word 'loaves' is a collective noun for loaves of bread.
There is not collective noun for the word 'loaf'. A collective noun is a word for a group of things; the noun loaf is a singular, one loaf. The plural noun is 'loaves'. Some collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves. Other collective nouns for loaves would be a word suitable for the context of the loaves; for example a basket of loaves, a shelf of loaves, a case of loaves, etc.
Loaves has one syllable.
I have two loaves of bread.
"Loaves" is the plural; the singular is "loaf". Example sentence:Mom baked six loaves of bread for the bake sale.
Loaves is the plural. The singular form of the word is loaf.
The base word for "loaves" is "loaf."
three loaves, to fish
Loaves is a plural noun; loaf is the singular form.