The plural of notice is notices.
As in "nobody notices the wet floor sign".
The plural is requests. Notice there is no apostrophe.
Notices of appeal.
'Choose' is a verb and therefore has no plural form. The corresponding verb is 'choice' , the plural form of which is 'choices'.
All you have to do is add an 's' at the end of the words.
"cent" 104 = cent quatre 400 = quatre cents (notice the plural mark) but 404 = quatre cent quatre (no plural mark when followed by another figure)
The plural is requests. Notice there is no apostrophe.
Notices of appeal.
The plural form of the noun pilot is pilots.The plural possessive form is pilots'.Example: The notice is posted in the pilots' lounge.
'Choose' is a verb and therefore has no plural form. The corresponding verb is 'choice' , the plural form of which is 'choices'.
All you have to do is add an 's' at the end of the words.
The plural possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe to the plural ending -s or -es. The plural of dressis dresses. So the plural possessive is dresses'. Notice that the apostrophe comes after the -s, not before it. And example in a sentence is: I like the color of those dresses, but I don't like the dresses' patterns.
"cent" 104 = cent quatre 400 = quatre cents (notice the plural mark) but 404 = quatre cent quatre (no plural mark when followed by another figure)
The word residential is an adjective. Adjectives are used to describe nouns. Adjectives do not have a plural form.e.g. "One large (adj) house. / Two large houses." Notice that it is the noun (house) that becomes plural, not the adjective.Compare:* The survey covers each residential area. (Singular)* There will be ten residential areas in the preliminary survey. (Plural)Singular and plural of related nouns: residence/residences; resident/residents.
Singular nouns are specific, plural nouns lose specificity, hence they become generic. It's especially important in titles. For example, we say an Academic Curriculum Specialist or Academic Curriculum specialists. Notice the capitalization of the singular Specialist, but not the plural specialists. That's because the plural does not refer to a specific person, but a more generic group of people.
It can be. If it's a noun, as in "He tacked the notices on the corkboard" then yes. If it's a verb, as in "John notices the dog in the kitchen" then it's singular.
caro, genitive singular carnisnominative ("Meat fell") : "caro" (no 'n') / plural "carnes"genitive ("belonging to the meat") : "carnis" / plural "carnum"dative ("at the meat") : "carni" / plural "carnus"accusative ("I ate the meat") : "carnem" / plural "carnes"ablative ("from the meat") : "carne" / plural "carnibus"locative ("where the meat is") : "carni" or "carne" / plural "carnibus"vocative ("Meat, what are you doing in the soup?") : "caro" / plural "carnes"You might notice that some of the forms are identical. For example, "carni" is used for the dative singular, and could be used for the locative singular (though these cases have different plurals).
To get in trouble - "להיכנס לצרות" (lehikaness letzarot). But notice that - "Tzarot" is actually plural (singular is "Tzara"), so basically in Hebrew we say "to get in troubles".