The plural of CD is CDs - without any apostrophe.
CDs No need for the apostrophe as the CD does not posses anything. Example of possession would be, "Steve's car is brand new." CDs is the way you write the plural form (more than one CD) of CD (CD is singular or just one CD.) ------------------------------------ one exception to the above: "John examined the CD's content by looking at the list on the back." this is a possession case!
There is no apostrophe if you are talking about more than one CD which is not possessive.e.g. The shop sold CDs.However, if you were talking about a CD which owned/possessed something, there would be an apostrophe.e.g. The CD's first song was my favourite.
Audis is the plural form Audi's is the possessive form Audis' is the plural possessive form The plural of Nazi is Nazis. The apostrophe is only used for possessive or to indicate missing letters, as in "it is" -> "it's", or "can not" -> "can't" Wiktionary.org/ does not have one noun that I could see that had a plural created by adding "'s", with the exception of "diva's" which I think can be contested. The same goes for abbreviations like CD and DVD -> CDs and DVDs. NO APOSTROPHE!
Definition: a definite article, which hints precisely a certain object, a specific thing or even a determined person. It´s used for meaning that we are not speaking of ANY, but of SOME UNIQUE being - even if it´s also used for plural (not ANY, but SOME people/things/objects). Examples (notice the difference of meaning): 1. Give me a CD please ( = any = no matter which or which type of CD); 2. Give me the CD please ( = that/this CD, not any other, only THAT/THIS one).
If the CD Player will not read the CD then either there is something wrong with the CD or the CD player or the CD or CD player needs to be cleaned.
the CD drive has lasers which read the CD, so the CD has pieces that can be read.
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
it mean there is no CD so make sure there is a CD in there
you can use CD,and / Cd;thus / or CD, so to join a CD sentence
what are cd-cd? *a cd=compact disc
They can play Cd-r's , example : a Cd-r that was copied & or burned from a pc. But , They can not play CD'S / software CD's (made) for a pc. jkvssc
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".