Swine is the plural form of swine.
swine is both the plural and singular
The possessive form for the noun swine is swine's.
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The possessive form for the noun swine is swine's.
The word swine is already the plural form of the noun. A group of pigs/hogs are called swine. Sentence example: The farmer raised many pigs at his hog farm, giving the best care possible to his swine.
In English, there is no forms for masculine, feminine and neuter. Gender is shown by using different words, for example:a male swine is a boara female swine that hasn't born young is a gilt; a female swine that has born young is a sow.
swine
The word "swine" is generally used as a plural noun. The singular form of "swine" is "swine" as well, but it is less commonly used.
One pig can be called a swine, or many pigs can be called swine, the same as with "hair", "fish", or "deer", since these words all use the identical word as both the singular and the plural forms of the words.According to most dictionaries, and as outlined in various grammar sources:"Nouns with identical singular and plural formsSome nouns have identical singular and plural forms. Examples are: sheep, swine, aircraft, spacecraft, series, species, pair etc." ~ Englishpractice.com(see link below in the related links section)Some people, and perhaps some dictionaries, prefer to use the word swine to mean only a plural form of pig or hog. Other plural forms of pig and hog are "pigs" and "hogs". There are some people who say that using swine as the singluar form "...is very old-fashioned and possibly obsolete", but either way is actually still correct grammatically.
Words that are the same in the singular and plural:scissorsinformationsheepmusicnewstrousersheadquartersgolddeeroffspring
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
Singular: die Schweinegrippe Plural: die Schweinegrippen
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.