The plural of sweet would be sweets. Though the word is more commonly used as an adjective than as a noun.
You just said it; Sweets; Plural of 'Sweet'
Children like sweets.
You just said it; Sweets; Plural of 'Sweet'
The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'sweets' is they as a subject, and them as an object in a sentence.Example: Do you like sweets. They are homemade. You may try them if you like.
"candy" or "sweets" translates in to German as :-"Bonbon" or "Süßigkeit" in the singlular and "Bonbons" or "Süßigkeiten" in the plural.
SWEETS - plural of sweet, a snack or treat SUITES - plural of suite, a room or lodging (also used for furniture grouping)
The noun 'sweets' is the plural form of the noun 'sweet', a word for a food having a high sugar content; a word for a thing (things).
The noun 'sweets' is the plural form of the noun 'sweet', a word for a food having a high sugar content; a word for a thing (things).
There is a sweet in the jar. => change the plural-form verb are to is, remove the s from sweets to make it singular, and remove somebecause it cannot apply to singular nouns.
In French, the word "sweets" is translated as "les sucreries," which is considered feminine. This is because "sucreries" is a plural noun that is preceded by the feminine article "les." In French, nouns can be either masculine or feminine, and the gender of the noun affects the articles and adjectives used with it.
No, the plural noun 'sweets' is a concrete noun, a word for things with a high sugar content; a word for physical things that can be seen, touched, and tasted.
The term for treats following a meal has two S's: dessert, plural desserts.E.g. Chocolate dessert recipes as opposed to the Sahara desert.