The plural form of spoonful is spoonfuls.
Two spoonfuls of sugar in my tea please.
spoons
Spoons
No, spoon is singular, the plural is spoons.
The plural of "spoon" is "spoons."
The plural form of "spoon" is "spoons."
spoons
The plural form is tablespoonfuls.Note that tablespoonful is spelled without an 's' between 'spoon' and 'ful'.
The possessive form of the singular noun spoon is spoon's, e.g "That spoon's handle is rather bent."The plural possessive form is spoons', e.g. "All of those spoons' handles seem to be bent."
The answer is simple. Spoons. Why? Because it ends with the consonant 'N', you add an 'S'.
Not technically: the compound subject uses the plural verb are."There are a spoon and a fork on the plate."But colloquially this construction, while erroneous, is very common. It could also be grammatically correct if the spoon is not on the plate (set off by a comma)."There is a spoon, and a fork on the plate." (and there is a fork on the plate)
The noun 'rest' is a mass (uncountable noun) as a word for a motionless state; a word for the remaining part of something.Example: You look tired. You should get some rest.The noun 'rest' is a count noun. as a word for a device used as a support for something. The plural form is 'rests'.Examples:My mom needs a spoon rest. (singular)This store as a lot of cute spoon rests. (plural)
that oldest spoon in the world is the carving spoon
spoon
There is no spoon, so the question is meaningless.