Singular
The correct phrase is "each of you has." The word "each" is a singular subject, so it takes the singular verb "has." In contrast, "have been" would be used with plural subjects.
The abbreviation for Imperial would be "Imp." or "Imps." if plural. If you want an example of each used in a phrase... "We are under Imp. attack!" For plural... "The Imps. are coming towards point seven five." Hope that helped. And, good luck.
Each year is NOT a prepositional phrase. Believe it or not, each is an adjective. Each is describing year.
The indefinite pronoun 'each' is singular.The noun 'boys' is the plural form of the singular noun 'boy'.
Eyeglasses are plural. Each lens is an eyeglass.
There are two syllables in the phrase "each state." The syllables in the phrase are each-state.
Yes. Always is made from two elements, all and way, each having lexical meaning. Originally a phrase, always meant all of the way ( the s is possessive, not plural).
'adorns leaves'Theses two words are not both plural. adorns is a verb (third person singular) and leaves is the plural of leaf.It is possible to have 2 plural word follow each other.The men's dogs (men's plural possessive of man, dogs plural of dog)
well i think that her is hers and his is just his
The plural of army is armies. As in "the two armies marched against each other".
The plural of chicken is chickens. For example: The farmer fed the chickens each morning.
a definition is a passage that explains the meaning of a term (a word, phrase or other set of symbols), or a type of thing. The term to be defined is definiendum (plural: definienda). A term may have many different senses or meanings. For each such specific sense, a difiniens (plural: definientia) is a cluster of words that defines that term.