The plural for for the noun waitress is waitresses.
Waitresses.
Waitresses.
The noun 'mice' is the plural form of the singular noun 'mouse'.
The word church is a singular, common, concrete noun. The plural form is churches, a regular plural (a regular plural is a noun made plural by adding 's' or 'es' to the end of the word; an irregular plural is a noun that is made plural in some other way).
Trios is the plural noun.
Nouns ending in 's' form the plural by adding 'es' to the end of the word.The plural form of the noun 'waitress' is waitresses.
Waitresses.
One waitress. Two waitresses. Plural possessive: The waitresses' tips were stolen.
Waitresses.
The plural of the noun "half" is "halves."
Yes, the noun 'waitress' is a common noun, a general word for any female server who waits tables in a restaurant.
"waitress" is a noun. a waitress is a person, not a way of describing something.
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.
The plural noun of general is generals. Generals is a regular plural noun.
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
It is a plural noun.
No, it is a possessive noun. Mothers is a plural noun.