The plural possessive is puzzles'.
plural
The correct spelling is "puzzles".
When there is a plural subject, you would use "do", which is the plural form of the verb. "Does" is used for a singular subject. Examples of a singular subject: "Mike does the laundry" and "Does Kim know about this?" Examples of two subjects (a plural subject): "Mike and Julie do the crossword puzzle together" and "Do Kim and Larry know about this?"
Easy to get without a lot of trouble.Answer: A LOT OF TROUBLE (above, tooth, plural, tartar)
What the farmer had to do to make ends meet. Answer: PRODUCE PRODUCE (coupon, plural, wizard, compel, hairdo, nature)
The correct notation is "week's," the apostrophe signifying ownership of whatever follows (ex. "This week's crossword puzzle was easy."). "Weeks" is the plural of week, so grammatically, it must be preceded by "these".
The correct notation is "week's," the apostrophe signifying ownership of whatever follows (ex. "This week's crossword puzzle was easy."). "Weeks" is the plural of week, so grammatically, it must be preceded by "these".
There is not a way to die a puzzle. A puzzle can only be put together.
Puzzle NO 60: Plaza Puzzle, Location, Station Exit. Please see the Related link below for a walkthrough of the puzzle.
The word for puzzle is "pahei" (pəhèi) (n) -- puzzle; riddle
The Tagalog word for puzzle is "puzzle" pronounced as "pasalaysay" or "pamsalaysay".
They can be called a sliding puzzle, sliding block puzzle, or sliding tile puzzle.