forests
The word forest is a noun. The plural is forests.
No, the noun phrase "the forest trees" is plural based on the plural noun "trees".The word "big" is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.To be a possessive form, add an apostrophe s to the end of the singular noun "forest": the forest's trees (also, the big forest's trees or the forest's big trees).
The word forest is singular.The plural would be forests.An example sentence with the singular is: I love the view of the forest from my window.An example sentence with the plural is: we have explored many forests all over the world.
The word 'forests' is a common, plural, concrete noun.
The plural form for the noun forest is forests. The plural possessive form is forests'.Example: The committee was formed to study the impact of our forests' land use.
The plural form of the noun wolf is wolves.The plural possessive form is wolves'.Example: This forest is the wolves' territory.
The plural noun is halves.
The plural noun of general is generals. Generals is a regular plural noun.
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.
The noun forests is not a proper noun; forests common noun, the plural form for the singular, forest, a word for any forest anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, a place, a thing, or a title; for example:Thomas J. Forest MD, Lafayette, LATahoe National Forest, CAForest Park Drive, New York, NY or Forest Street, Reno, NVForests of the World, Durham, NC (fair-trade wholesaler)Forest Park Elementary School, Boynton Beach, FL'Once Upon a Forest', 1993 Hanna-Barbera animated feature film
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
It is a plural noun.