The plural of "poem" is "poems."
The word "haiku" is singular and also plural. You can say "a haiku" or "many haiku."
the plural
Poems come in several forms. A common form of poetry is where the last word of a sentence rhymes with the next or the previous line. There is also another form where the line you want to rhyme doesn't rhyme with the next but with the one after it. There is also a Japanese version called Haiku.
The spelling poet's is the singular possessive.The plural possessive is poets'.When the plural ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
No, "verses" is not an adverb. It is a noun that refers to a set of lines in a poem or song.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
Yes, "lyric" can refer to a single set of words in a song or poem (singular) or to multiple sets of words (plural). For example, "The lyric of this song is beautiful" (singular) and "The lyrics of these songs are catchy" (plural).
Yes, "poem" is a noun. It refers to a piece of writing that typically follows a structured form and is used to evoke emotion or express ideas.
Poems is the plural of poem. The form poem's is a possessive form (genitive) or a contraction with the verb is. Plurals are NOT formed with an apostrophe.The apostrophe marks either a genitive form or an ellision, i.e. when the 'i' of 'is' dropped and 'poem is' is contracted to 'poem's' as in "This poem's the best I've ever read".The genitive form is either singular or plural. 'The form of the poem' could be written as 'The poem's form', while 'the form of the poems' would be 'the poems' form', with the apostrophe coming after the 's' in the plural.Examples :The poem is in the book of poems. (singular and plural)The poem's form is unique. (The form of the poem is unique.)The poems' author is unknown. (referring to a group of poems)This poem's very interesting. (This poem is very interesting.)
There is no plural word for if.
The plural word for delay is delays.