ship
The plural possessive form of "buccaneer" is "buccaneers'".
Ships' is the plural possessive, meaning belonging to a number of ships.
a synonym for vessel is hi my name is Jacob
The possessive form of the plural noun seamen is seamen's.A plural noun that does not end with an s forms the plural by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word, the same as a singular noun.Example: The seamen's teamwork is essential for many tasks aboard a ship.
"Noughts" =the plural of 'zero'. "-nauts" is a suffix used for the crew of a vessel - generally a ship or spaceship.
Lofes is the plural form of the word lofer in French. The English translation is luff, which is a part of the sail near the mast on a ship.
Actually, the tern "ship In a bottle" is the proper term. For the plural, it would be "ships-in-bottles". You can use hyphens or not. Interestingly, one organization for it is called SIBAA: Ships In Bottles Association of America.
No, caravels is a noun, a common, plural noun. The singular form is caravel. The appropriate pronoun to use for a caravel (a type of ship) is it.
cargoes is the plural of cargo. strict meaning is goods carried by ship. cargo = freight, load, shipment, contents, goods
The word for rib in the Latin language is costa, (plural=costae), if you mean the rib bone. If you mean the rib of a ship, the word is statumen.
No, the word feet is not a collective noun, it is the plural form of the noun foot.