The irregular plural for mouse is mice.
The irregular plural for mouse is mice.
Mice is already plural. e.g. One mouse, two mice, and three blind mice!Mouse has an irregular plural, mice.
The plural form for the noun mouse is mice. The plural possessive form is mice's.example: The mice's noise is irritating.
The plural form for the noun mouse is mice.The plural form mice is an irregular plural, a noun that forms the plural in a different way than adding an -s or an -es to the end of the word.
Yes, men is an irregular plural noun. A regular plural is a noun that you add an 's' to make the plural. Irregular plurals use a different spelling of the word to make the plural. Examples: singular / plural man / men goose / geese child / children mouse / mice
Some examples of irregular nouns include "child" (plural: children), "foot" (plural: feet), and "mouse" (plural: mice). These nouns do not follow the typical rules for forming plurals in English.
No, it is not, because its spelling does not change when you make it plural it just becomes pianos. Whereas mouse is and irregular noun, because its spelling does change when it becomes plural, as it becomes mice. Hope that helps.
An irregular plural possessive noun is the possessive form of an irregular plural noun.A regular plural noun is a noun that forms the plural by adding an 's' or an 'es' to the end of the word.An irregular plural noun is a noun that form the plural in some other way.Examples of irregular plural nouns (and the irregular plural possessive form):baby, babies (the babies' nursery)child, children (the children'splayground)medium, media (the media's reports)mouse, mice (the mice's nest)woman, women (the women's department)
No, the plural noun 'sleighs' is a regular plural noun.A regular plural noun is a noun that forms its plural by adding an 's' or an 'es' to the end of the word.An irregular plural is a noun that forms its plural in some other way, for example child->children, mouse->mice, foot->feet, etc.
The irregular plural of 'child' is 'children', the plural possessive form is children's.
It is mouses. The plural of mouse (small furry creature) is mice, so one might think that the plural of the pointing device would also be mice. However, the two words have undergone a differentiation through usage. According to Garner's Modern American Usage, the best practice is to pluralize it mouses. That also goes for timid people ("When it comes to warfare, he's a real mouse. In fact, he comes from a long line of mouses"). Similarly, whereas the plural of louse, the small wingless insect, is lice, the plural of louse, the cad, is louses.
The irregular plural of "alumnus" is "alumni."