Skins
There is no word 'louce' in English. Perhaps you meant louse, a small, parasitic insect that lives under the skin of mammals.The plural of louse is lice.
The noun corruption is the singular form; the plural form is corruptions.The noun graft used as the word for fraud is a non-count noun, there is no plural form.The noun graft used as the word for botany or biology, such as a plant variation resulting from a graft or a surgical procedure, the plural form is grafts; He required several skin grafts.
The word "sclera" is applied to the white outer layer of the eyeball. Doctors would normally refer to it in the singular, like skin, even when referring to both eyes. However, the Greek plural of the noun would be sclerae.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'louse' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female insect.There are no gender specific nouns for a male louse or a female louse, they are referred to as a male or a female.
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
The plural possessive form is skins'.
f the noun is pluraland already ends in s, add an apostropheafter the s to show possession. Thefrogsβ skin is mottled. = the skin belongs to the frogs. Apostrophes for plural possession
The word 'skin' is a noun (skin, skins) and a verb (skin, skins, skinning, skinned). Examples:noun: My skin gets very dry this time of year.verb: The tomatoes will skin easily if you steam them first.The plural form for the noun skin is skins: The banana skins were all still green.The possessive form for the noun skin is skin's: The banana skin's color should be yellow.
There is no word 'louce' in English. Perhaps you meant louse, a small, parasitic insect that lives under the skin of mammals.The plural of louse is lice.
peau (fem., plural peaux) means skin in English.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "pustules" (dead cell masses under the skin).
Potato is the singular noun. Potatoes is the plural where we add "-es" to form the plural. Most plurals only require an s but some words ending in vowels require the "-es". Potato's is a singular possessive -- for example, "The potato's red skin looked appetizing." It refers to 1 single potato having red skin. Potatoes' is the plural possessive. "The potatoes' red skin looked appetizing." It refers to more than one potato having red skin.
The noun corruption is the singular form; the plural form is corruptions.The noun graft used as the word for fraud is a non-count noun, there is no plural form.The noun graft used as the word for botany or biology, such as a plant variation resulting from a graft or a surgical procedure, the plural form is grafts; He required several skin grafts.
The correct spelling is tattoo.
Exanthem (plural, exanthems or exanthemata) is a skin eruption regarded as a characteristic sign of such diseases as measles, German measles, and scarlet fever.
The word "sclera" is applied to the white outer layer of the eyeball. Doctors would normally refer to it in the singular, like skin, even when referring to both eyes. However, the Greek plural of the noun would be sclerae.
The word grapes is the plural form of the singular noun grape.example: The bunch of grapes weighs a little over a pound.The singular possessive form is grape's.example: I bit the grape's skin to test the sweetness inside.The plural possessive form is grapes'.example: The grapes' price at the farm stand is quite reasonable.