The plural of bottle top is bottle tops. As in "the bottle tops are plastic".
There were several bottles of milk left on my neighbours doorstep, may be they had gone on holiday?
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'ink'.A collective noun is an informal part of speech, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun.In the past, you would have looked for a bottle of ink, but today you are most likely looking for a cartridge of ink.
The noun 'nectar' is an uncountable noun, as a word for a substance. For example, you could have "one bottle of nectar" or "a million bottles of nectar".The plural form of uncountable nouns for substances is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'. For example, "it's made from the nectars of four different flowers."
Hemi is one prefix that means half. This is used in hemisphere.
The plural of bottle top is bottle tops. As in "the bottle tops are plastic".
Yes, the noun 'bottle' is a countable noun, the plural form is bottles. Example: There were three bottles on the tray, one bottle of Ginger Ale and two bottles of cherry cola.
The noun refreshments is the plural form for the singular form refreshment. Examples:A cold bottle of water is the only refreshment I need right now.The refreshments for the party are ready.
There were several bottles of milk left on my neighbours doorstep, may be they had gone on holiday?
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'ink'.A collective noun is an informal part of speech, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun.In the past, you would have looked for a bottle of ink, but today you are most likely looking for a cartridge of ink.
Actually, the tern "ship In a bottle" is the proper term. For the plural, it would be "ships-in-bottles". You can use hyphens or not. Interestingly, one organization for it is called SIBAA: Ships In Bottles Association of America.
Paprika is an uncountable noun for a substance, rather than an object, it doesn't have a plural. It has a quantity. For example, a pinch of paprika, a teaspoon of paprika, or a bottle of paprika.
Yes, the word 'bottles' is both a noun (bottle, bottles) and a verb (bottle, bottles, bottling, bottled).The noun 'bottles' is the plural form of the singular noun 'bottle', a word for a type of container; a word for a thing.The verb 'bottles' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to bottle; meaning to fill such a container with liquid.
Bottlenose dolphin babies are called calves
The noun 'nectar' is an uncountable noun, as a word for a substance. For example, you could have "one bottle of nectar" or "a million bottles of nectar".The plural form of uncountable nouns for substances is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'. For example, "it's made from the nectars of four different flowers."
Hemi is one prefix that means half. This is used in hemisphere.
(The word there's is a contraction meaning "there is" - the plural possessive pronoun is spelled "theirs")There's a bottle of milk in the refrigerator.There's no sugar left.