The noun children is the plural form of the singular noun child.
"Children" is a plural noun. The singular form is "child."
The word children is the plural form for the singular noun child.
No, "children" is a plural noun. The singular form is "child."
The plural for child is children.
The possessive form for the plural noun children is children's.
The noun 'dolphin' is singular, a word for one of a type of marine mammal. The plural noun is dolphins.The noun 'children' is plural, a word for two or more young humans. The singular noun is child.
The singular form for the plural noun children is child.
Yes, the word children is the plural form for the singular noun, child. Children is a count noun. Children's is the plural possessive form. The word rights is the plural form for the singular noun, right. Rights is a count noun. Children's rights is the plural form for children's right.
No, the word children is a plural noun. The singular form is child; the singular possessive is child's.
The word 'child' is the singular noun.The plural noun is 'children'.Examples:A child was playing in the sandbox. (singular)Several children were playing in the sandbox. (plural)
"Group of children" is considered singular because "group" is the main subject of the sentence, while "children" is a descriptive noun modifying the group. So, you would use singular verbs and pronouns when referring to a group of children.
The word children is the plural form for the singular noun child. The form children's is the plural possessive form. For plural nouns that do not end with -s, the possessive form does add the -'s to the end of the word.
The noun 'children' is a plural, common, concrete noun; the plural form of the singular noun 'child', a word for a person (people).
The word children's is not a pronoun, it is a noun. The word children is the plural form for the noun child. The word children's is a plural, possessive noun.