No. Yours is the possessive form. "Your" used in a sentence can refer to a single person as in "this is your car" or when you are talking to a group of people and say "This is your country".
To make "yours" singular, you can say "your." For instance, instead of saying "Is yours the blue one?" you can say "Is your the blue one?"
The possessive adjective 'your' functions as both a singular or plural pronoun.The possessive pronoun 'yours' functions as both a singular and plural pronoun.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun. Examples:Dad, your dinner is ready. (singular)Boys, your dinner is ready. (plural)Jack and Jill, your dinner is ready. (plural)A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. Examples:Dad, the seat on the left is yours. (singular)Boys, the seats on the left are yours. (plural)Jack and Jill, the seats on the left are yours. (plural)
The plural form of "write" is "writes." For example, "He writes" would be the singular form, while "They write" would be the plural form.
The second person, personal pronoun is you.The pronoun 'you' functions as a subject or an object in a sentence.The pronoun 'you' functions as a singular or a plural pronoun.The second person, possessive pronoun is yours.The pronoun 'yours' functions as a subject or an object in a sentence.The pronoun 'yours' functions as a singular or a plural pronoun.The second person, possessive adjective is your.The pronoun 'your' can describe a noun that is a subject or an object in a sentence.The pronoun 'your' can take the place of a singular or a plural noun.Examples:Jack, you can wash up for lunch now. (singular subject)Children, you can wash up for lunch now. (plural subject)Lunch is ready. Jack, yours is on the table. (singular subject)Lunch is ready. Children, yours is on the table. (plural subject)Jack, your lunch is ready. (singular, describes the subject noun)Children, your lunch is ready. (plural, describes the subject noun)
The word theses is plural; the singular form is thesis. Examples:singular: I will write my thesis over the holiday.plural: The teacher had twenty two theses to grade.
"Has" is the singular form of the verb "have," used with third person singular subjects (he, she, it). "Have" is the plural form, used with first person singular (I), second person (you), and all plural subjects (we, they).
The plural of your life is your lives.
yours (masculine singular) = shelcha (שלך)yours (feminine singular) = shelach (שלך)yours (masculine plural) = shelachem (שלכם)yours (feminine plural) = shelachen (שלכן)
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)
Write is already singular. The plural is writes.
The possessive adjective 'your' functions as both a singular or plural pronoun.The possessive pronoun 'yours' functions as both a singular and plural pronoun.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun. Examples:Dad, your dinner is ready. (singular)Boys, your dinner is ready. (plural)Jack and Jill, your dinner is ready. (plural)A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. Examples:Dad, the seat on the left is yours. (singular)Boys, the seats on the left are yours. (plural)Jack and Jill, the seats on the left are yours. (plural)
In the singular "you" and "yours" in the plural "you" and "your". " Them" or "they'
"Write" is a verb, not a noun. Verbs in English mostly do not have singular and plural forms.
The plural form of "write" is "writes." For example, "He writes" would be the singular form, while "They write" would be the plural form.
The word 'years' is the plural form of the singular 'year'.
Centuries' is the plural possessive of the singular noun century.
tú (informal, singular)) usted (formal, singular) vosotros (informal, plural) ustedes (formal, plural)
No, it's a personal pronoun (both singular, and plural) in the 2nd person. Yours is a possessive pronoun.