The noun 'spectacles' is the plural form of the noun 'spectacle', a word for a visually striking performance or display.The noun 'spectacles' is an uncountable noun as a word for eyeglasses, a binary noun, a word for something that two parts make up the whole.Binary nouns are a shortened form of 'a pair of'.The singular form is a pair of spectacles. The plural form is pairs of spectacles.Examples:He removed his heavy spectacles with a sigh of relief.Both boys ended up making gigantic spectacles of themselves.
The noun spectacles is an uncountable noun with no singular form. The noun spectacles is a shortened form for a pair of spectacles. The plural form is two pairs of spectacles.The plural form for the noun phrase young lady is young ladies. The singular possessive form is young lady's; the plural possessive form is young ladies'.Example singular possessive: The young lady's spectacleswere left in the library.Example plural possessive: Two young ladies' spectacleswere left in the library.
The noun spectacles is a shortened form for the term 'pair of spectacles'. The plural form is two pairs of spectacles.The nouns spectacles belongs to a group of nouns that are a shortened form for 'a pair of', for example:binocularsglassespantsscissorsshearsshortsspectaclestongstrouserstweezersAll of these nouns are made plural by changing 'a pair of...' to 'pairs of...'.
That is. it's like scissors where a plural describes 1 only. More than 1 would be pairs of glasses.Another answer:The singular of 'glasses' (vessels from which you can drink liquids) is 'glass'.'He drank a glass of wine.''He drank three glasses of wine.'The word 'glasses' meaning 'spectacles' has no singular form.
Spectacles is a plural. As a noun, plural terms which are equivalent to their singular term (consider glasses) are usually used without change. I.e.) He wears glasses (singular) They all liked their glasses (plural). The spectacles were quite useful (singular). No matter how many spectacles (plural) you own, one is often enough.
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.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
No! Consider: trousers jeans pyjamas pants scissors spectacles glasses (meaning spectacles).
The singular form of "cuffs" is cuff.
The singular form of "stratum" is "stratum." The word does not change in its singular form.
The singular form of feet is foot.
The singular form of "dice" is "die."