I think there is no such thing.
Maybe you are thinking of third person plural pronoun. The third person plural pronoun is they.
Third person singular pronouns are he /she/it
Hi, you seem to be mixing up more than one concept. "Third person plural" is the form of a verb that goes with "they" - e.g. third person singular "he goes", third person plural "they go". A plural noun is the form of a noun that denotes more than one, e.g. "ball" becomes "balls". There is no situation that I can think of where the noun of a sentence would be affected by the subject being third person plural.
For third person plural or plural noun subjects do not add -s to the verbthey swimthe boys swimFor third person singular and singular noun subjects add -s to the verb.he swimsshe swimsit swimsthe dog swimsI is not a third person subject pronoun so no -s is added to the verb.
No, "expands" is not a plural noun. It is the third person singular form of the verb "expand."
The possessive adjective form of pronoun 'their' is the third person plural, describing a noun as belonging to more than one person or thing. The singular third person possessive adjectives are his, hers, its.
The pronouns "I, we, she, they, and he" are personal pronouns.A personal pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.I = first person, singular, subjective;we = first person, plural, subjective;she = third person, singular, subjective;they = third person, plural, subjective;he = third person, singular, subjective.
Hi, you seem to be mixing up more than one concept. "Third person plural" is the form of a verb that goes with "they" - e.g. third person singular "he goes", third person plural "they go". A plural noun is the form of a noun that denotes more than one, e.g. "ball" becomes "balls". There is no situation that I can think of where the noun of a sentence would be affected by the subject being third person plural.
Any singular noun not ending in 's', any plural noun not ending in 's', and any third person pronoun not ending in 's'. Examples:John is coming for dinner. (John is a singular, third person, proper noun; dinner is a singular, third person, common noun.)The women raised a lot of money. (Women is a plural, third person, common noun; money is an uncountable, third person, common, noun.)They went to Miami on vacation. (They is a plural, third person, personal pronoun; Miami is a singular, third person, proper noun; vacation is a singular, third person, common noun.)
It is a plural noun. It is also a verb in the present tense, third person singular.
No, it is a plural noun. The noun penguins could be replaced by the third-person plural pronouns, they and them.
"Thinks" is the third-person form of "to think", which is a verb... so no, it is not a plural noun.
The conjugation "is" is the third person singular, present tense of "to be."The third person plural, present tense, is "are" (they are).
No, "children" is not a third person singular. It is a plural noun referring to more than one child. Third person singular would be a single form of a pronoun or verb, like "he," "she," or "it."
Noun singular Noun plural Verb (third person singular)
Noun singular Noun plural Verb (third person singular)
It is a plural noun. It is also a verb in the present tense, third person singular.
For third person plural or plural noun subjects do not add -s to the verbthey swimthe boys swimFor third person singular and singular noun subjects add -s to the verb.he swimsshe swimsit swimsthe dog swimsI is not a third person subject pronoun so no -s is added to the verb.
The word cowboys is a plural noun. It could be replaced by the third-person plural pronouns they or them.