more than one mouse, it is the plural of mouse. one mouse, two mice.
Crooks owns a Bible and a copy of the California civil code of 1905 in "Of Mice and Men."
Mice? Or Mouses?Really, the answer is either. Both forms are used among professionals and the general public, and both forms are listed in the Oxford English Dictionary and the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, so use whichever one you prefer.
It means baby mice.
later in the day
If by Fancy mice you mean Show mice, & common you mean pet/lab/snake food mice, then yes, they do mix. They're all basically the same animal, just different variations.
dictionary
the dictionary.
Mice is the most common answer, however, when you're talking about the computer input device the plural can be either mice or mouses. Both are in the Oxford English Dictionary when referring to the computer device - mouse. When we're talking about the little furry cheese-eater, the plural is mice.
See mean-8. Or get a dictionary.
1. A dictionary has definitions, not words that mean the same as other words 2. A dictionary is thicker and is therefore a better weapon choice 3. Dictionary begins with the letter D not the letter T . Unless by dictionary you mean dictionary used in computer programming
why are golden mice endangered? not like normal mice. i mean golden mice that live in the forests
A dictionary. If you mean a book of maps, that's called an atlas.