The noun pants does not have a singular form, it is a binary noun, a word for something of two parts making up a whole. The noun pants is a short form for a pair of pants, or the plural pairs of pants.
"Pants" is always a plural noun and it takes a plural verb.
The word 'pants' is plural. If you want to refer to several pairs of pants, then you say 'several pairs of pants'.
pairs of pants
Pants'
The plural form of the noun pant (a short quick breath) is pants.The plural possessive form is pants'.Example: His pants' quickness told me that he had run far.The noun pants (a garment) is a shortened form of a pair of pants.The plural form is pairs of pants. The plural possessive form is pairs of pants'.Example: These pants' prices are out of my range.
The noun 'pants' is a non-count, binary noun; a word for something that has two parts that make a whole.A binary noun is a shortened form of 'a pair of' or 'pairs of'. Other examples of binary nouns are scissors, pliers, shorts, pajamas, etc.The noun 'pant' (plural 'pants') is a word for a short quick breath(s).The word 'pants' is also the third person, singular of the verb to 'pant'.
The singular possessive form is pants'.The noun pants is a short form for a pair of pants; the noun pants does not change from singular to plural, the wordpairis the part of the term that changes: a pair of pants, two pairs of pants.
The singular possessive form is pants'.The noun pants is a short form for a pair of pants; the noun pants does not change from singular to plural, the word pair is the part of the term that changes: a pair of pants, two pairs of pants.
The noun 'pants' is both the singular and the plural.Pants is from the group of nouns that sound plural, but are in fact singular or plural. This is because the word pants is actually a shortened form of 'a pair of pants' (pair is singular). Other examples from this group are shorts, glasses, binoculars, scissors, etc.
The plural form for the noun fly is flies.
No. The word pair is a noun, meaning a group of two. The word of is a preposition, and has a plural noun (socks, pants, pliers,scissors) as its object.
plural
No, "jeans" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to a type of pants made of denim fabric.
The word "pants" is considered plural because it refers to a pair of separate leg-coverings that are worn together as a single garment. The garment is made up of two distinct "pants" for the left and right legs, hence the plural form.
Pants, scissors, pyjamas, species, spectacles, gallows, tongs, trousers, jeans are examples of nouns ending in 's' that are always plural
The word "genes" applied to biological DNA, is plural. (adjectives use the singlular, e.g. "gene therapy") "Blue jeans" (pants) is a "paired plural" noun such as "pliers" or "scissors", with almost no use of the singular. "Jean material" is probably the exception. The term "blue jeans" for denim pants originated in the "Gold Rush" period of 1850-55.