Yes, the plural form is costs.
Example: The costs of the project are within the budget.
Yes. The plural of the noun cost is costs.
Yes, the plural of "cost" is "costs."
Cost bases.
The singular possessive form of the noun cost is cost's.The plural form of the noun is costs.The plural possessive form is costs'.
The singular possessive is cost's (e.g. The cost's increase was staggering.)The plural is costs. The plural possessive is costs' (apostrophe only).(e.g. As the prices of raw materials and energy rose, the costs' major impact was on small businesses.)
What if it costs. It is singular so you use the singular verb form costs The plural form would be "What if they cost" "What if it costs" is present tense. "What if it cost" is past tense. For singular Plural it'd be more like "What if the cost" = Singular. "What if the costs" = Plural. -J
The plural of automation is automations. As in "the automations reduce the cost of human labour".
Verbs only have a plural or singular form when the subject is plural or singular. plural subject - books - The books cost a lot of money. plural subject - they - They cost a lot of money singular subject - book - The book costs a lot of money. singular subject - it - It costs a lot of money. For singular subjects add -s to the verb.
No, toys is the plural form of the singular noun toy. The plural possessive is toys'.The toys' cost was nothing in comparison to the smiles of the children.
"Cost" as a noun is "costa". The plural is "costas". As a verb "to cost", it is "costar". "¿Cuánto cuesta?" means "How much does it cost?"
The plural form is ranchers. The plural possessive is ranchers'.
The possessive form for the plural noun accessories is accessories'.example: The cost of the dress was reasonable but the accessories' cost was not.
The noun wars is the plural form of the singular noun war.The singular possessive form is war's.The plural possessive form is wars'.Examples:Our city was in ruins by the war's end. (singular)The wars' cost in lives in the twentieth century should never be repeated. (plural)
It is 'cost'. For example, if the noun used is first or third person plural, it is always 'have cost'; if the noun used is third person singular it is 'has cost'.Present perfect is have/has costThey/We/You/I have cost us a fortune.He/She/It has cost the school lot of money