The plural form of jeans is jeans. No change to the word. It's context tells us whether it is in plural or singular form. As in "a pair of jeans" (singular), or "many pairs of jeans" (plural).
The plural form of pair of jeans is pairs of jeans.
Jeans
No! Consider: trousers jeans pyjamas pants scissors spectacles glasses (meaning spectacles).
The word 'jeans' is the singular noun.There are a number of nouns in English that sound plural in their singular form. That is because they are really a shortened form of 'a pair of...' (pair is singular). Those include such things as jeans, pants, shorts, scissors, shears, eyeglasses, binoculars, etc.
Yes, jeans is a common, concrete noun, a word for any jeans of any kind. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing; for jeans would be Arizona Jeans, Guess Jeans, Lee, or Levi Jeans.
'des jeans' or less frequently 'des blue-jeans'
She spilled a coffee on her jeans.
The plural of jean is jeans.
The plural form for the singular noun jeans is two pairs of jeans.The word jeans is one of a group of words that is a shortened form of 'a pair of...'. Some others are pants, trousers, glasses, binoculars, scissors, tongs, etc. They are all singular that use the plural form, such as two pairs of tongs or two pairs of glasses.
The noun 'jeans' is a type of uncountable noun called a binary noun, a word for something that is made from two parts to form the single thing. Binary nouns are always plural. Units of binary nouns are expressed as 'a pair of' or 'pairs of'.The possessive form for the noun jeans is jeans' (singular or plural).EXAMPLESsingular: My jeans' pocket is ripped.plural: All of the jeans' prices were the same.
In French, the word "jeans" is masculine and is written as "le jeans".
No! Consider: trousers jeans pyjamas pants scissors spectacles glasses (meaning spectacles).
The sentence should be corrected to "Your blue jeans are good."
"Jeans" is a plural noun. It refers to a type of garment that is typically made of denim and consists of trousers with legs that cover the hips and thighs.
These nouns are always plural and they always take plural verbs: * glasses * pants/trousers * shorts * pajamas * jeans * people * police * scissors
The word "genes" applied to biological DNA, is plural. (adjectives use the singlular, e.g. "gene therapy") "Blue jeans" (pants) is a "paired plural" noun such as "pliers" or "scissors", with almost no use of the singular. "Jean material" is probably the exception. The term "blue jeans" for denim pants originated in the "Gold Rush" period of 1850-55.
Pants, scissors, pyjamas, species, spectacles, gallows, tongs, trousers, jeans are examples of nouns ending in 's' that are always plural
No, "jeans" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to a type of pants made of denim fabric.
The word 'jeans' is the singular noun.There are a number of nouns in English that sound plural in their singular form. That is because they are really a shortened form of 'a pair of...' (pair is singular). Those include such things as jeans, pants, shorts, scissors, shears, eyeglasses, binoculars, etc.