lips
No. Lip gloss are the words used, so it would be lip glosses.
Because we have a bottom lip and a top lip so we have 2 lips in total! That means it's a plural! Otherwise if we had a just a top lip it would be a lip!
Lips is a noun. It's the plural form of lip.
a pronoun is a word that has more than what meaning like a lip
Yes, "lips" is a noun. It is the plural form of the noun "lip," which refers to the fleshy part that forms the opening of the mouth in humans and many animals.
LabiaLabium (plural labia) is a Latin-derived term meaning "Lip". Labium and its derivatives (including labial, labrum) are used to describe any lip-like structure, but in the English language, labium often specifically refers to parts of the vulva\
I believe it is already in plural form, as well as it's regular form. For example, you don't say gooses, but you say "goose." I'm pretty sure you wouldn't say ellipsises. EDIT:::EDIT:::EDIT:::EDIT:::EDIT:::EDIT::: With all due respect, this is an incredibly wrong . The plural form of "goose" is "geese." Additionally, the plural form of "ellipsis" is "ellipses" (pronounced "ee-lip-sees").
When White Fang encounters Lip-lip, Lip-lip challenges White Fang and tries to bully him. White Fang initially tolerates the bullying but eventually retaliates by viciously attacking Lip-lip and establishing dominance over him.
It's actually lip-syncing or lip-synching, from synchronization.
A labium is a Latin term that refers to a lip-like structure or fold in biology. In anatomy, labium can refer to the labia, which are the inner and outer folds of tissue around the vaginal opening in females. In insect anatomy, labium refers to the lower lip or mouthpart of an insect.
The scientific name for lips is "labium" in singular form and "labia" in plural form.
lip camphor