No, "butter" is an uncountable noun in the singular form according to the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary.
Butterflies is the plural form, and the spelling is BUTTERFLIES, not BUTTER FLYS
The word butter is an uncountable noun. Thus, it doesn't have a separate plural form.
butters
The noun 'butter' is a mass (non-count) noun, a word for a substance. Multiples are expressed as some butter, more butter, sticks of butter, tablespoons of butter, etc. The plural form is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of' butters, for example: They sell a selection of butters, like sesame butter, almond butter, and cocoa butter.
Yeah, they can have it as an occasional treat, but dont feed it to them as their regular daily diet. :)
No, compound subjects can take a singular verb if they are considered as a single entity or idea. For example, "Bread and butter is my favorite snack" uses a singular verb because bread and butter are seen as a single item.
Butter is "beurre" in French, a masculine noun.
No, peanuts is a plural noun. The singular form may be used with nouns as an adjunct (peanut butter, peanut vendor, peanut farm).
We Butter the Bread with Butter was created in 2007.
Cold butter is just butter that has been in the fridge.
It contains peanuts and perhaps a little salt. No dairy butter. No apple butter. No almond butter. No Shea butter. And for sure, no Antimony Butter!
1/2 cup of butter=113.5grams of butter=1stick of butter=1/4pound of butter=4ounces of butter=8Tablespoons of butter=14teaspoons of butter