As is usual in Spanish, you just need to add an 's': profesoras.
The plural form of "profesora" is "profesoras."
Yes, the word "profesora" is the feminine form of the word "profesor" in Spanish. It is used to refer to a female teacher or professor.
Yes, the Spanish phrase "la profesora" contains a feminine noun.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article "la" means "the." The feminine noun "profesora" means "(female) professor." The pronunciation is "lah PROH-feh-SOH-rah."
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."
Singular for teacher: profesor (male), profesora (female) Plural: profesores (male, mixed, or unknown/unspecified gender), profesoras (female)
No. Word: Profesora.
Un profesor is a male teacher Una profesora is a female teacher Also, maestro or maestra works as well. So, profesor/maestro (male teacher) profesora/maestra (female teacher)
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."
It has no plural form.
The plural form for the noun sergeant is sergeants; the plural possessive form is sergeants'.
The plural form of rung is rungs.
The plural form of mouth is mouths. The plural form of month is months. The Mounth is a range of hills in Scotland and does not have a plural form.