No, the noun 'headquarters' is an uncountable noun, an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.
Headquarters is a plural noun. It has no singular form
Headquarters is both singular and plural.
It would be incorrect to say "this headquarters"... it would have to be "those headquarters." I've never heard it used in any singular form. You would have to say "this headquarter" which is never used.
The singular possessive form for the noun corporation is corporation's.Example: The corporation's headquarters is located in New Jersey.
The name Leaps & Bounds is not associated with any singular organization. There are a large number of companies using that name, so a singular corporate headquarters would not necessarily point to the right company. It is used by a pediatric care center, a sports center, and a Michigan-based family services organization.
nouns ending in -ies = species / seriesnouns that end in -s = crossroads / barracks / headquarters / means / Swiss
The plural of headquarters remains headquarters.
he / she / Chinese / sheep / deer / fish / Swiss / species / crossroads / barracks / headquarters / offspring / data / dice / aircraft
an antonym for HEADQUARTERS is classroombecause headquarters mean:The office that serves as the administrativethat's why classroom is the antonym for headquarters
where is the headquarters of ecowas
headquarters
Here are some examples of nouns that are plural in form but singular in meaning: gallows glasses headquarters news pajamas pants scissors series species billiards athletics physics Philippines measles tweezers dominoes economics civics politics