The plural of subject is subjects.
The plural of the word "subject" is "subjects".
Well, it is a verb, and it can't be plural all by itself, but if you mean the verb for a plural subject, then it would be the word "were." I was, you were, we were (past tense). I am, you are, we are for present tense.
The word in and of itself is neither. Singular and plural normally refer to nouns. However, in the case of the word teaching, the present participle, present tense of the verb 'to teach' can be used for a singular or a plural subject. Examples: He is teaching his son to play baseball. (verb for a singular subject noun) or The teachers are teaching their students to write in cursive. (verb for a plural subject noun) Both are correct.
In this sentence the word 'we' is the subject; the word 'we' is first person plural noun (pronoun).
Elles is the plural form of the French word elle.Specifically, the word functions as an emphatic or subject pronoun. In the singular form, the word means "she" as the subject of a phrase or sentence and "her" after a preposition (for example, pour elle ["for her"]). In the plural, the word means "they" (in the sense of a group of females or feminine-gender concepts or objects) and "them" after a preposition (for example, pour elles ["for them"]).The pronunciation will be the same in the singular and the plural: "ehl."
Just add an S. "The subjects were typed up for later study."No apostrophe. That is for ownership (The subject's position in the sentence was near the front.).
Your question is not clear.If you mean "what is the plural of the word subject?" - then you just add -s to make the plural form subjectsIf you mean "What is a plural subject in a sentence?" a plural subject in a sentence is a subject that refers to more than one thing.The boys ate the ice cream - in this sentence the subject 'boys' is plural - boys means more than one boy.The boy ate the ice cream - in this sentence the subject 'boy' is singular - boy means one boy.
The plural of subject is subjects.
The noun 'do' is a word for the first note on a musical scale; and an informal word for a social event such as a party or a hairstyle (short for hairdo).The plural noun is dos.The verb 'to do' that follows a plural subject is do!Singular: I do, you do, he/she/it does.Plural: We do, they do.
plural verb - were plural subject - boys The boys were hungry
The pronoun you is both singular and plural, subjective and objective. Examples: Subject singular: You may have a snack. Object singular: The sandwich is for you. Subject plural: You are all invited to our barbecue. Object plural: Joe and Joan, we're expecting you too.
Animi is the genitive singular or nominative plural of the word animus. Whereas animus would be the word "soul" as the subject of a sentence, animi would be either "of [a or the] soul", or the plural subject "souls", depending on the context.