child
singular : mouse plural :mice
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
The noun 'mice' is the plural form of the singular noun 'mouse'.
Mouse is singular. Mice is plural.
mouse is singular, mice is plural
The word mice is the plural form of mouse. (one mouse, two mice)
child
No, the word mice is a plural noun. The word mice ending with an s must have the apostrophe before the ending s(mice's).The word mice's is the possessive form of the plural noun.The singular noun is mouse.The singular possessive noun is mouse's.EXAMPLESPlural: Jack has two pet mice. The mice's namesare Mickey and Minnie.Singular: A mouse was nibbling the doughnut. The mouse's whiskers were covered with powdered sugar.
The form mouse's is the singular possessive form.The plural form of the noun mouse is mice.The plural possessive form is mice's.Example: The mice's tracks let us to the hole in the basement door.
There is no word spelled 'mouses'.The plural form for the singular noun 'mouse' is 'mice'.The singular possessive form is mouse's.The plural possessive form is mice's.examples:We followed the mouse's tracks to find its entry point.We found many mice's tracks in the garage.
The singular is mouse; the plural is mice; the plural possessive is mice's.When making an irregular plural noun into the possessive form, you treat the plural form the same as a singular regular noun. For example:man, men, men'sox, oxen, oxen'sgoose, geese, geese'sparty, parties, parties'cactus, cacti, cacti'sbox, boxes, boxes'mouse, mice, mice's, mices'
The word 'louse' is singular, as is the word 'mouse'. The plural forms are 'lice' and 'mice' respectively. (However, the plural of 'house' is not 'hice'!)