They and them are plural forms of he, she, and it. This means that the singular form of "themselves" would be himself, herself, or itself.
To refer to a single individual or thing, change "themselves" to "themself." However, some prefer to use "themselves" even for singular pronouns to be inclusive of gender identity.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The singular form of "that" is "it."
You should put "s" after the verb in the present tense when the subject of the sentence is third person singular (he, she, it) and the verb is in base form. For example, "He walks to school every day" or "She eats an apple for breakfast."
The singular form of "stratum" is "stratum." The word does not change in its singular form.
The singular form of scissors is "scissor."
The singular form of the plural noun teachers is teacher.The singular possessive form is teacher's.Example: I put my homework on the teacher's desk.
The singular possessive form of "teacher" is "teacher's."
The correct singular possessive form of the word "teacher" is "teacher's."
The possessive form of the singular noun branch is branch's.example: I stepped out and put my faith in the branch's strength.The plural possessive form is branches'.
singular possessive form of each noun shown
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The singular possessive form is candy's.Example: He put the candy's wrapper under his pillow. Is he expecting a candy fairy?
The singular form of "that" is "it."
The possessive form of the singular noun teacher is teacher's.Example: I put my homework on the teacher's desk.
The singular form of "cuffs" is cuff.
The singular form of "stratum" is "stratum." The word does not change in its singular form.
You should put "s" after the verb in the present tense when the subject of the sentence is third person singular (he, she, it) and the verb is in base form. For example, "He walks to school every day" or "She eats an apple for breakfast."