The plural form of chat is chats.
A cat is singular in French, which is "un chat." The plural form of cat is "des chats."
The French plural of "un chat" is "des chats."
The plural form of "do" is "do" and the plural form of "don't" is "don't." These words do not change in the plural form when used in a sentence.
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)
The plural form of "was" is "were."
The delegates came to the conference in chauffeur driven cars and once parked up the chauffeurs got together for a chat.
can my cat eat cabbage? (note: 'choux' is the plural form of 'chou')
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
"Groceries" is the plural form of "grocery."
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
The plural form of "meter" is "meters."
The plural form of the demonstrative pronoun 'that' is those.
The full form of CHAT is-Conversational Hypertext Access Technology The full form of CHAT is-Conversational Hypertext Access Technology
'Your' singular is 'do'; the plural is 'bhur' in Irish.'Your cat' is 'do chat' but the plural is 'bhur gcat'.
There are three different forms of the word "the" in the French language. "Le" is the masculine form of "the." "La" is the feminine form. "Les" is the plural form. For example, let's say you want to say "the cat" in French. The word for cat is "chat," which is masculine, so you would say "le chat." If you wanted to say "the beach," you would use the feminine noun of "plage," so it would be "la plage." If you wanted to refer to these nouns in the plural - "the cats" and "the beaches" - you would use the plural for of "the," which applies to both masculine and feminine plural nouns. Hence, "les chats" and "les plages," respectively.