Yes the word flies is the plural noun of fly.
Flies is also the present tense of the verb to fly.
a cloud of flies
Yes, the plural noun 'flies' is a common noun, the plural form of the singular noun fly; a word for a type of insect; a general word for any flies of any kind.The word 'flies' is also the third person, singular present of the verb to fly.
Possibly, but not necessarily. Except for a few fossil forms, such as the -s marker of the third person singular indicative and the present system of to be there is no number in the English verb.
The plural form for the noun fly is flies.
The word 'flies' is the plural form for the singular noun 'fly'.
Flies is a verb. It describes an action. It can be a noun referring to insects.
No, flew is a verb; fly, flies, flying, flew, flown. The noun forms are flyer, one who flies, and the gerund (verbal noun) flying. The noun flue is pronounced the same; a flue is the exhaust for a heat or combustion source.
The gender specific noun for a female who files a plane is aviatrix.The gender specific noun for a male who flies a plane is aviator.These words have become obsolete in favor of the common gender noun, pilot (a word for a male or a female who flies a plane).
Yes, "Lord of the Flies" is a proper noun because it is the title of a specific novel written by William Golding. In this case, it is used as a title for a literary work.
The collective nouns for flies are:a business of fliesa cloud of fliesa grist of fliesa hatch of fliesa swarm of flies
Collective noun for a group of flies: swarm
Flies is the plural of the noun fly