No the word chimp is a singular noun.
The plural noun is chimps.
The plural form of the noun 'chimp' is chimps.
The possessive noun is chimp's.A possessive noun is a noun that shows that something in the sentence belongs to that noun. Possession is shown by adding an apostrophe -s ('s) to the end of the word or just an apostrophe (') to the end of a plural noun ending in -s.The banana of the chimp is the chimp's banana.
The possessive form of the noun chimp is chimp's.example: The chimp's cleverness gets him into a lot of trouble.
The possessive noun is chimp's.
The possessive form is: the chimp'sbanana.
The words, "the banana belonging to the chimp" is not a sentence, it's a sentence fragment, a noun clause (a group of words that contains a noun or pronoun and a verb but is an incomplete thought that can't stand on it's own).There is no possessive noun in the noun clause, "the banana belonging to the chimp".The possessive form is, "the chimp's banana", a noun phrase (any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun, without a verb, that can function in a sentence as a subject or an object).
The plural noun is halves.
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.
The plural noun of general is generals. Generals is a regular plural noun.
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
It is a plural noun.
No, it is a possessive noun. Mothers is a plural noun.