Chinese is already plural.
The plural form of "Chinese" is "Chinese." The word stays the same in both the singular and plural forms.
In Chinese, the plural form of the word "minute" is "分钟" (fēnzhōng).
Chinese is both singular and plural. Chinese is also an adjective, not a noun. Therefore there is no possessive tense. A Chinese man's purse. Now if you are looking for "eses".... Try female, plural possessive of Prince. Princesses'
The proper noun Chinese, a word for the people of China or the language of China, is an uncountable (mass) noun. The possessive form is Chinese's.It should be noted that the possessive form is seldom used because the word Chinese is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun; for example a Chinese custom or Chinese porcelain.
In Chinese, nouns typically don't change form to indicate plurality. Plurality is usually indicated by context, quantifiers, or specific words used before the noun. For example, to specify plural you might use "们" (men) following a pronoun, or a quantifier like "些" (xiē) before a noun.
The plural form of "do" is "do" and the plural form of "don't" is "don't." These words do not change in the plural form when used in a sentence.
chinese's is the plural form of chinese............ :) <3
The noun Chinese is an uncountable noun, it has no plural form. The possessive form is Chinese's.Example: The Chinese's diet is based on rice and vegetables.
In Chinese, the plural form of the word "minute" is "分钟" (fēnzhōng).
It is an adjective, so there is no plural. One Chinese person, two Chinese people, three Chinese meals, four Chinese cities.
Probably it is the same as the word Chinese. Chinese is plural and singular. She is Balinese. They are also Balinese.
Chinese is both singular and plural. Chinese is also an adjective, not a noun. Therefore there is no possessive tense. A Chinese man's purse. Now if you are looking for "eses".... Try female, plural possessive of Prince. Princesses'
The proper noun Chinese, a word for the people of China or the language of China, is an uncountable (mass) noun. The possessive form is Chinese's.It should be noted that the possessive form is seldom used because the word Chinese is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun; for example a Chinese custom or Chinese porcelain.
The plural noun for Chinese is ....... Chinese.
The noun Chinese is both singular and plural.
In Chinese, nouns typically don't change form to indicate plurality. Plurality is usually indicated by context, quantifiers, or specific words used before the noun. For example, to specify plural you might use "们" (men) following a pronoun, or a quantifier like "些" (xiē) before a noun.
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.