my is singular.........our is plural
The word "child" changes completely to "children" when plural.
The word changes from singular to plural by adding an "s" at the end of the word.
The plural of change is changes.
To form the plural of a word, typically add "s" or "es" to the end of the word. However, there are irregular plural forms where the word changes entirely (e.g. child to children). Use a dictionary or grammar guide for exceptions.
Yes, "lives" is an irregular plural noun. The singular form is "life," and the plural form does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-s" or "-es" to form the plural.
The noun 'changes' is the plural form for the noun 'change', a singular, common noun. The noun 'change' is an abstract noun as a word for an instance of making or becoming different, the act of replacing a thing with something else (a change of clothes). The noun 'change' is a concrete noun as a word for the money that you get back to you when you give more money than it costs to buy something. There is no plural form for this use of the noun change.
The word changes from singular to plural by adding an "s" at the end of the word.
Ladies' dresses 'Ladies' is the plural form of 'lady'. The word changes completely in the plural (ie not 'ladys') so the apostrophe must go after the entire word.
The plural of change is changes.
To form the plural of a word, typically add "s" or "es" to the end of the word. However, there are irregular plural forms where the word changes entirely (e.g. child to children). Use a dictionary or grammar guide for exceptions.
The present tense of the word cry is "cry" . You may be confused as to whether it is the same as the past tense or not, but the past tense is cried. There are, however, exceptions such as the word "put" where the word never changes despite the tense.
The noun 'changes' is the plural form for the noun 'change', a singular, common noun. The noun 'change' is an abstract noun as a word for an instance of making or becoming different, the act of replacing a thing with something else (a change of clothes). The noun 'change' is a concrete noun as a word for the money that you get back to you when you give more money than it costs to buy something. There is no plural form for this use of the noun change.
Yes, "lives" is an irregular plural noun. The singular form is "life," and the plural form does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-s" or "-es" to form the plural.
--> In the English language adjectives do NOT have a plural form. Therefore, you can say: "The kid is safe. The kids are safe."The verb changes, but the adjective does not.
I don't completely understand the question. If you're asking about plural nouns, you can add an s to almost any word UNLESS they end in, s, x, ch, sh because if a word ends in s, x, ch, or sh you have to add es. If a word ins in z, you have to add zes. Some words change completely when they're plural. A few words are the same for plural and singular. For example, the plural of dog is dogs, the plural of dress is dresses, church, churches, wolf, wolves, mouse, mice, but the plural of sheep is sheep, the plural of deer is deer.
"Plural sense" refers to the grammatical form of a word used to indicate more than one of something. In English, plural nouns typically end in -s or -es, and can also involve changes in the spelling of the word. For example, "dog" becomes "dogs" in its plural sense.
They are completely different words. Were is the plural past tense of the word 'are." Where is a word to tell a person or thing's location, and wear is a verb to tell what someone has on.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.