Singular ; hero
Plural ' heroes
Singular ; country
Plural ; countries.
The plural form of the noun hero is heroes.
No, the word hero is the singular form. The plural of hero is heroes.
The singular form for heroes is hero; the singular form for countries is country.
The plural of the noun hero is heroes.
The plural form of hero is heroes.
plural is heroes, possessive is heroes'
The singular form of heroes is hero.
The plural form of the noun ''country'' is countries.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
The plural form of the noun country is countries.The plural possessive form is countries'.Example: All of the countries' representatives have been seated.
heroes
The singular form of feet is foot.
The singular form of the question, "Are heroes born?" is: "Is a hero born?"
The singular form for the plural noun countries is country.
The singular possessive form of "countries" is "country's".
No, it's not. "Conutry's" is singular and "countries'" is plural.
The word countries is the plural form of the singular noun country.The possessive form of the plural noun is countries'.The singular possessive form is country's.
The possessive form of the singular noun hero is hero's.Example: The man deserves a hero's medal for that rescue.One = heroMany = heroesSingular possessive = hero'sPlural possessive = heroes'
No, the noun hero is the singular form.The plural form is heroes.
The plural form of the noun ''country'' is countries.
The noun 'hero' is singular (one hero).The plural noun is heroes.
The plural form of the noun country is countries.The plural possessive form is countries'.Example: All of the countries' representatives have been seated.
The possessive form of the singular noun country is country's.The plural form of the noun country is countries.The plural possessive form is countries'.Examples:The country's income is derived mainly from tourism.All of the countries' representatives were in attendance as the meeting began.
"Country's" is possessive, indicating ownership or relationship to a country. To show that something belongs to or is associated with more than one country, you would use "countries" (plural form).