People can mean a singular as well as a plural. I can give you two examples:
1) There were many people on the street.
obviously refers to plural.
2) The governor spoke to a people of ministers at the assembly.
here it is singular since its a collective noun. I am referring to an assembly of ministers
People can either be the plural of "person" or a singular word meaning a group of people defined by nation or government (i.e. the American people).
"People" is the plural form of the singular noun "person".
Peoples is plural. People is singular. Person is singular of people.
Plural. Person's would be the singular.
The noun 'people' is a plural noun.The singular noun is 'person'.The word 'people' is also a verb: people, peoples, peopling, peopled.
It is usually used as the plural of person.Yes, the noun people is a plural noun; the singular is person. Examples:The people at the library were very helpful.The person at the library was very helpful.
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
Not as a plural of a singular noun. Once it is plural, it is already a multiple.However, group nouns that can use a singular verb form can be made plural to indicate more than one group or instance, such as family-families and staff-staffs.ALSO, a few plural nouns have homonyms that are singular, and these can be made plural.One example is people, which is a plural noun, but also has a singular meaning as "a race of individuals" which can be pluralized as peoples.
"Has" is singular, e.g. He has, she has. "Have" is plural, e.g. They have, we have. The exception is "I" - e.g. I have.
Peoples isn't a word. The noun people is the plural form for person. The possessive form requires an apostrophe -s, not just the -s. For example: Singular possessive: person's Plural possessive: persons' Plural possessive: people's
singular and plural
The correct possessive form of the plural noun people is people's.An irregular plural noun that doesn't end with -s forms the possessive the same as a singular possessive noun.
Are is plural. "Is" is singular. For example, "There is a glove on the chair". That is singular. "There are gloves on the chair". That is plural.
The word 'people' can be either singular or plural in meaning. The approximate meaning when it is singular is 'a group of persons united by some sort of common thread'. In this sense, the word 'people' has a plural form 'peoples'. For example 'He travelled extensively in the Far East and lived among many different peoples.' When the meaning of the word 'people' is plural, it does not have a plural form. For example 'There are many people in the country who do not agree with the Government's policies.'
practitioner is singular (plural practitioners)sofa is singular (plural sofas)satellite is singular (plural satellites)clips is plural (singular clip)dentist is singular (plural dentists)dollars is plural (singular dollar)article is singular (plural articles)magazines is plural (singular magazine)laminator is singular (laminators is plural)radios is plural (singular radio)
singular Singular: plural is coats