As in the clothing? You would say, "I wore shorts to the game. I wore two different pairs of shorts to the game." So you could use pairs, if you want. But the plural of shorts would be shorts.
Shorts'
The noun 'pants' is both the singular and the plural.Pants is from the group of nouns that sound plural, but are in fact singular or plural. This is because the word pants is actually a shortened form of 'a pair of pants' (pair is singular). Other examples from this group are shorts, glasses, binoculars, scissors, etc.
Bavarian shorts can also be called lederhosen shorts or leather shorts. They are leather shorts often worn with suspenders. Yes,bavarian shots are called as lederhosen shorts or leather shorts. Lederhosen comes in different lengths and named as so. You can find lederhosen shorts at Ernstlicht shop
The singular form is a pair of trousers; the plural form is pairs of trousers.The noun trousers is one of a group of words that are a short form for 'a pair of', words for things things that require two halves to make one.Some other nouns that are used in their shortened form are pants, shorts, glasses, binoculars, tweezers, tongs, or pajamas. The singular forms are a pair of, the plural form is pairs of.
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
Shorts'
An apostrophe is almost never used to form a plural. The spelling "shorts" is plural, and the spelling short's would have to be a possessive.As in a garment of clothing: "I like wearing shorts."As in a belonging: "I like Short's Coffee Shop."
These nouns are always plural and they always take plural verbs: * glasses * pants/trousers * shorts * pajamas * jeans * people * police * scissors
Presumably you are speaking of pants, in which case you would be speaking of shortened pants, which over time has become shortened (pardon the pun) to shorts. Shorts is already the singular form. A plural form would, for example, be called a pair of shorts. These inconsistencies in the English language are due to the fact that English is a "borrowed" language, a reflection of the fact that American is a land of immigrants, each bringing their own languages at different historical eras.There are a number of nouns in English that sound plural in the singular form. That is because they are really a shortened form of 'a pair of...' (pair is singular). Those include such things as pants, shorts, scissors, shears, eyeglasses, binoculars, etc.
Examples of nouns that are both plural in form and in meaning include "scissors," "pants," "glasses," and "shorts." These words refer to items that consist of two parts or items that come in pairs, making them plural in both form and meaning.
There is only one way to spell "sorts" for all usages. Similar-sounding words are the plural nouns shorts or swords.
The noun 'pants' is both the singular and the plural.Pants is from the group of nouns that sound plural, but are in fact singular or plural. This is because the word pants is actually a shortened form of 'a pair of pants' (pair is singular). Other examples from this group are shorts, glasses, binoculars, scissors, etc.
They are different because shorts are longer and boxer shorts are shorter. Boxer shorts look cooler.
Bavarian shorts can also be called lederhosen shorts or leather shorts. They are leather shorts often worn with suspenders. Yes,bavarian shots are called as lederhosen shorts or leather shorts. Lederhosen comes in different lengths and named as so. You can find lederhosen shorts at Ernstlicht shop
No, oddly enough, the noun bra (short for brassiere) is not a binary noun*. The noun bra is a count noun (one bra, two bras, a dozen bras). Binary nouns are non-count nouns, for example the binary noun 'shorts' is one pair of shorts or two pairs of shorts, the noun shorts is a plural noun with no singular form.*Binary nouns are words for things that are two parts making up the whole; binary nouns are a shortened form for 'a pair of'.
The noun glasses (meaning spectacles) is a singular form, a shortened form of 'a pair of glasses'. The plural form for glasses is 'pairs of glasses'. If it means "vessels to hold liquid" then it is already plural, "glasses." Other examples of singular nouns that are a short form for 'a pair of...' are pants, shorts, drawers, jeans, scissors, shears, pliers, and binoculars.
shorts not shorts shorts an camofloge shirt an tennis shoes an wata