The plural of rabbit is "rabbits"
The plural form for rabbit ears is (one) rabbit's ears; or (two) rabbits' ears.
The possessive form for the plural noun rabbits is rabbits'.
Yes, the noun rabbits (the plural form of the singular noun rabbit) is a common noun; a general word for a any kind of rabbits.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun rabbit is the name of a rabbit, such as Bugs Bunny or Br'er Rabbit.
My rabbit had babies.A hare is a rabbit.Her pet rabbit's whiskers tickled the girl's face.
We had rabbit stew yesterday.My rabbit was called Bugsy.She likes to rabbit on all day.The rabbit snatched the carrot and hopped back to its burrow.
The plural form for the noun rabbit is rabbits.
no its not
The plural form for rabbit ears is (one) rabbit's ears; or (two) rabbits' ears.
The noun 'rabbits' is a plural, common, concrete noun; the plural form of the singular noun 'rabbit', a word for a type of mammal; a word for a thing.The word 'rabbits' is also the third person, singular form of the verb to rabbit; a word for hunting this type of mammal.
Yes, the sentence "the boy and the rabbit are in the park" is grammatically correct. It correctly uses subject-verb agreement, where the plural subjects "the boy and the rabbit" are matched with the plural verb "are."
Not for the plural rabbits. Apostrophes are almost never correct for forming plurals.The word rabbit's could be properly used in two instances:1) the possessive for a single rabbit -- The rabbit's leg was caught in the cage.2) a contraction, rarely used, for is or has -- That rabbit's a lot of trouble.
The possessive form for the plural noun rabbits is rabbits'.
Yes, "hairs" is the correct spelling. Not to the confused with "hares" (the plural of the rabbit-like creature)
Yes, the noun rabbits (the plural form of the singular noun rabbit) is a common noun; a general word for a any kind of rabbits.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun rabbit is the name of a rabbit, such as Bugs Bunny or Br'er Rabbit.
The noun children's is the plural possessive form. Replace the word 'children' with 'ladies'. "The ladies' pet" is obviously plural possessive. The term 'The children's pet' is a singular subject or object, for example: The children's pet is a rabbit. The care of the children's pet is the children's responsibility.
The plural noun tunes means songs or music.The slang toons means cartoons, or fictional characters used in them (e.g. in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?).
lapin (masculin)plural: lapins