The plural form of start is starts.
Some plural possessive nouns that start with letter N are:nations'necklaces'needles'neighbors'nerves'nights'noodles'noses'nuts'nylons'
Since crayon(c-rai-on)doesnt have a vowel at the start its plural is crayons
The plural form of the noun alto is altos.The plural possessive form is altos'.Examples:We need the alto's voice to start here. (singular)All of the altos' parts are marked in blue. (plural)
Only if its plural, like conclusions.
No, it is not. The word starts is a form of the verb to start, or a plural noun (more than one start).
we/you/they start: nous commençons - vous commencez - ils/elles commencent
"A strawberry" is correct. "An" should be used only before vowel sounds. Not all words that start with vowels start with vowel sounds, and not all words that start with vowel sounds start with vowels. Examples: a tree, an orange, a hairbrush, an uncle, a uniform (because "uniform" starts with a "y" sound and not a vowel sound), and an honor (because the "h" is silent, so "honor" starts with a vowel sound).
Oh, my friend, that's quite a lot of examples! Let's start with some common ones like "they," "we," "you," and "them." Remember, language is like a beautiful painting - it's all about finding the right colors and strokes to express yourself. Just take it one word at a time and let your creativity flow.
More than one xylophone is xylophones (or a nice start on a percussion section!)
Start is a verb; the past tense of the verb start.
Goose or Geese (Plural) Goshawk, gull
I think this might be a trick question. The word "Princess" is singular, remove the last "s" and you get "Princes" - the plural of "Prince". Note that the question doesn't say that word you get after you "remove an s" is the plural of the word you start with.