The plural of stand is stands.
As in "he stands there in fear".
A deer was standing by the trees with her faun.Several deer were standing by the trees.
The plural form for the noun moose is moose. The singular and the plural possessive form are also the same: moose's.EXAMPLES:A moose's antlers was spotted in the tall brush.We saw a group of moose's tracks in the road.
Fogs is the proper plural form of fog. However, fog is also commonly accepted as a standing plurality of its root on its own and is used more frequently than fogs.
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word. Example sentences: A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular) Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Example sentences:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
Yes there is. Believe it or not, the plural of moose is simply moose.Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Example sentences:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)Contrary to popular belief, Meese, Moosen, and Mooses simply aren't words.
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Examples:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
This is the third-person plural of the imperfect tense of stare, "to stand." It can be translated as "they were standing" or "they used to stand."
No, "moose" is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Example sentences:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
The word 'theirs' is a possessive pronoun that takes the place of something belonging to a plural noun. When the possessive pronoun is standing in for one thing it takes a singular verb form; when the possessive pronoun is standing in for multiple things, it takes a plural verb form.Examples:Theirs is the house on the corner.Theirs are the best burgers in town.
No. Stand is a noun, or verb (to stand up). There is no adverb than means in a standing manner, so you would use a preposition, or a synonym such as upright.
The plural of moose is moose. It stays the same.Additional InformationContrary to what urbandictionary.com believes, the plural of "moose" is "moose," and not "meese." This definition has been acquired from the Official Scrabble Players' Dictionary.There are no "mooses" or "meese".ExamplesI see there are eight moose over there.I see there is a moose over there.A moose is eating grass.The moose are eating grass.Look, there's a moose! There's two moose over there."A moose stood quietly near the edge of the trees.Two moose stood quietly near the edge of the trees.