The singular form of feet is foot.
It is hurriedly.
The singular form is hilum.
The form plumber is the singular form; the plural form is plumbers.
The noun grandmother is the singular form.
That is the correct spelling of "hurry" (to rush or make haste).
"Hurry up!" in English is Sbrigati! in the singular or Sbrigatevi! in the plural in Italian.
No, hurried is a verb form or adjective. The noun form is "hurry" (a hurry).
Yes, the word 'hurry' is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). The noun 'hurry' is a singular, common, abstract noun. Example uses: Noun: What's your hurry? Noun: The hurry of the trip was so exhausting. Verb: If you don't hurry, you'll miss the school bus.
No, the word buses is the plural form of the singular noun bus.The possessive form of the singular noun bus is bus's.The possessive form of the plural noun buses is buses'.Example:Please hurry, we don't want to miss the bus. (singular)The buses stop here every fifteen minutes. (plural)The bus's driver gave us a big smile. (singular possessive)The buses' parking area was full. (plural possessive)
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
To make the sentence negative, add the word "not": You are not in a hurry.
The singular form of feet is foot.
Hurried
It is hurriedly.
The singular form of "hypothysis" is "hypothesis."
The singular form is ombudsman.