tooth. Teeth is plural, tooth is singular.
The noun 'teeth' is the plural noun. The singular noun is 'tooth'.
The word tooth is the singular noun. The plural noun is teeth.
The noun teeth is plural.The plural form is tooth.
The singular possessive is tooth's.
The plural noun 'teeth' has an abstract use that the singular noun tooth does not. The plural noun 'teeth' is an abstract noun as a word for effective power to enforce or accomplish something. example: We need a law that has some teeth.
The possessive form for "the teeth of the horse" (singular) is "the horse's teeth".The possessive form for "the teeth of the horses" (plural) is "the horses' teeth".
The plural noun 'teeth' is an abstract noun as a word for the power and authority to be effective; a word for a concept.The plural noun 'teeth' (singular 'tooth') is a concrete noun as a word the hard, bony enamel-coated structures in the jaws of most vertebrates; the projections on the rim of a cogwheel or the edge of a saw or a comb; a word for physical things.
If you are talking about the tooth of Fang or fangs that are teeth,then it would be Fang Teeth.
No. Tooth is a singular, teeth is plural.
Yes, the word 'calculus' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for the nasty crust on long-unbrushed teeth (plaque) and the equally nasty branch of mathematics.
Yes, the word teeth is a common noun, the plural form for the singular noun tooth; a word for any tooth or any teeth of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing; or a title; for example:Dr. Teeth and The Electric Mayhem, rock band from the Muppet TV showDragon's Teeth (lava formation), Kapalua, HIBright Teeth Gel, teeth wihitener"The Skin of Our Teeth", a play by Thorton Wilder"Teeth", a book of poems by Arcelis Girmay
Yes. Hay is a singular noun. A Singular noun means one item only. So technically, hay is a singular noun.