There is NO PLURAL for "together" a it is NOT a noun.
The plural form for the noun Charles is Charleses; the plural possessive form is Charleses'.Example: Both Charleses are in my class but the Charleses' desks are not together.
"Did" can be used with either a singular or plural subject.Examples:"I did the homework last night." - singular subject"We did the homework last night." - plural subjectNo. Even though the instrument itself is one unit, it is actually a pair of tongs or pincers. Just like scissors is also a plural word because it is a pair of cutters working together.
It is singular: an other, pronounced a-nother. This word is one of the proofs that normal English speech is run together.
The plural for the noun loss is losses; the plural possessive is losses'.
plural verb - were plural subject - boys The boys were hungry
No, the noun 'get-together' is a singular noun.
The plural of welder is welders. As in "the welders fused the metal plates together".
plural executive
The plural of sheep is sheep. it is used as a singular too. The plural of dozen is dozens. Put together: There are dozens of sheep.
no it is not it is just another way of saying it in present tense
Gets-together is the verb present tense of the word get-together. But get-togethers is the plural for the noun get-together. Gets-together=action for getting-together Get-togethers=an informal social gathering
Couple is a plural noun so -- walk together -- is correct
The plural form for the noun Charles is Charleses; the plural possessive form is Charleses'.Example: Both Charleses are in my class but the Charleses' desks are not together.
The plural form is phones.Example: I have one phone and my sister has another one; we have two phones all together.
It is at the vertex of which the plural is vertices
The noun 'duo' is singular; a singing performance by two singers, a word for two people who perform together, work together as a team, or who regularly do things together. The plural form is duos. Example sentence:Batman and Robin are known as the dynamic duo.
Steve Jobs is singular. "together" denotes plural. You have no second person mentioned in your question.