The plural of direction is directions.
bronchi (plural form:bronchus)
Depending on the tense, the verb of director is direct, directs, directing and directed.Some example sentences are:"I will direct you there"."He directs them to the correct place"."He is directing the traffic"."I directed this film".
The word 'them' is a plural, objective, personal pronoun. The pronoun 'them' is the direct object of the verb 'see'.
The subject of the sentence "there" is a plural pronoun, identified as plural by the verb for a plural subject "are"The direct object noun "moose" is a plural noun, identified as plural by the adjective "more", indicating a quantity.The subject of the adverbial clause is "people", a plural noun.
Big or large. for the adjectives, direct objects and stuff you need the plural eendings that match though.
Yes, it is a plural noun. It means conclusions or assumptions based on other than direct evidence.
The singular possessive form is woman's.The plural possessive form is women's.An irregular plural noun that does not end with an -s forms its possessive the same as a singular noun by adding an apostrophe -s ('s) to the end of the word.Examples:A woman's watch was found in the rest room. (singular)Can you direct me to the women's department? (plural)
Únanse is Spanish for "unite yourselves". It's the second-person plural direct command of "unir" (to unite).
The plural noun 'books' can function as a direct object or an indirect object; examples:direct object: I returned the books to the library.indirect object: I bought these shelves for books.
Louse (cinifes) is a 3rd Declension Feminine (Yes, Romans were blatantly sexist) noun. Thus: cinifes -- the/a louse (subject)---------Nominative Singular cinifis -- of the louse/ the louse's------Genitive Singular cinifi -- to/for the louse-------------------Dative Singular cinifem -- a louse (direct object)--------Accusative Singular cenife -- by/with/from the louse--------Ablative Singular cinifes -- the lice (subject)-------------Nominative Plural cinifum -- of the lice---------------------Genitive Plural cinifibus -- to/for the lice---------------Dative Plural cinifes -- the lice (direct object)-------Accusative Plural cinifibus -- by/with/from the lice------Ablative Plural
There are three nouns in the sentence:mornings (plural), object of the preposition 'in';people (plural), subject of the sentence;coffee (uncountable), direct object of the verb 'drink'.
The word survivors is a plural, common noun which is the direct object of the sentence. The direct object in this sentence is a subject complement, the object of a linking verb that renames the subject.