The correct spelling is "address".
When you are talking about more than one it's "addresses".
The word address is singular; the plural form is addresses.
If you were writing a letter to 2 female, unmarried siblings, you could address the envelope "The Misses Smith"
(* the word there should not be confused with their, a plural possessive pronoun)(location) We know the address, but not how to get there.(existence) There is paint on my leather mirror and it will not come off.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
The word address is singular; the plural form is addresses.
The plural of address is addresses and the plural possessive is addresses' (apostrophe only).
Addresses is the plural.
The plural of address is addresses and the plural possessive is addresses' (apostrophe only).
The singular noun is address.The plural noun is addresses.
The plural form of the noun address is addresses.The plural possessive form is addresses'.example: All of the addresses' accuracy has been verified.
The plural of address is addresses.
The plural of address is addresses and the plural possessive is addresses' (apostrophe only).
The plural form of the noun address is addresses.The plural possessive form is addresses'.Example:The student addresses' schedule is posted on-line.
The word "ma'am" is a noun of polite address, a contraction for "madam." The plural is "mesdames." Another polite address form is "ladies."
"Thou" is a singular pronoun, used to address one person informally in Early Modern English. Its plural form is "ye" or "you."
The word addresses can be a noun or a verb. It is the plural noun of address. It is the third person singular present tense of the verb address.