I'm pretty sure its 'Mouse' :)
Mice is usually for more then one mouse.
hello
You can say computer mice or computer mouses, both are acceptable.
"Mice" is the plural form of "mouse." So, say you buy one of them at the pet store. Your sentence would be, "I bought a mouse at the pet store today!" If you bought more than one, it would be, "I bought several mice at the pet store today."
i would say the domestic mouse those are very common mice and recommended for a first pet
If we can be one, you're two mice!
Yes, mouse is singular and therefore the verb form that you would use with it is gets; if you were talking about mice plural, that would use get. The mouse gets wet in the rain. The mice get wet.
Leave the mice and the mother alone for three days. Let the mother and the babies bond and settle down. After three days, you can then handle the baby mice and the mother mouse. It is best to take the mother mouse out first and put her some where safe while you handle her babies. If she made a den by going under something like a mouse house, it is really important to remove her first. She won't kill them, but if you put the thing that the den is made under aside and start handling the mice, she will grab her babies and carry them up under the mouse house or whatever it is she is using.
I personly have never seen a mouse eat meet so I'm going to say no.
It depends are you a person that likes quiet if so mice are very quiet if you like to admire a birds feathers but if it was ap resonal question i would say a mouse they are adorable
Mice is already a plural word, the plural of mouse.
first let me just say the plural of mouse is mice not mouses! >: ( and no if you get them wet the water will most likely kill them! i know this as i breed mice and rats so i do my research! ; )
yes, a mouse is a small animal so more, in theory would be mouses however in the English language it is correct to say mice instead