indians
The plural possessive form for Indian is Indians'.
The plural of Shastri would be Shastris
The singular is opossum (not opposum). The plural is opossums. In case you are wondering, opossa is wrong. The word is not taken from Latin. It is an Algonquian (American Indian) word.
If the word Indian is used to refer to people from India or identifying themselves as Indian the translated term would be "Indien". However, if the term is used to refer to natives as a slang, it would be translated as "Amérindien". * Masculine: Indien * Feminine: Indienne * Plural: Indiens / Indiennes * Masculine: Amérindien * Feminine: Amérindienne * Plural: Amérindiens / Amérindiennes
The plural of opossum is opossums. In case you are wondering, opossa is wrong. The word is not taken from Latin. It is an Algonquian (American Indian) word.
Goose is from the Germanic root, and its plural was adopted into Old English as "geese". This is an abnormal plural.Moose is of Algonquin (Amerindian) origin and has a plural of "moose".(The listing in the Urban Dictionary is obviously intended as humor.)The word "moose" came to us from Algonquian Indians. Consequently its plural, instead of being "mooses" or "meese", is the same as the singular "moose." That is true of most Indian names whether of a tribe, such as the Winnebago and Potawatomi, or of an object such as papoose. It is also true of many wildlife names not of Indian origin -- for example: deer, mink and grouse.
If you're not decorating the name with "tribe" or "nation" or some other collective, yes. Examples*: The Apache are a fierce, proud people The Wampanoag tribe lives on the plains of Nebraska * These may not be true, but they are grammatically correct.
No. Now there may be 402 articles in "indian constitution," whatever you mean by that... but if there ARE, then there [would be] 402 articles, as above. "Articles" is plural, so the plural form of "to be" must be used, which is "are." "ARE there 402 (four hundred and two) articles in [the] [I]ndian [C]onstitution?"
Teruel (the town/province) betel (Indian shrub) caramel (a kind of pilchard or sardine) cartel (placard/handbill/poster) macaurel (poisonous snake) puntel (glass-blower's rod)
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural of 'this' is 'these' and the plural of 'that' is 'those'.
Isthmi is plural. There are actually two plural forms. I will list them from singular to plural. Isthmus - Singular Isthmi - Plural Isthmuses - Plural