The plural of "thief" is "thieves."
Thieves is already plural. The singular is thief.
"Thief" is a singular noun. The plural form is "thieves."
The form thief's is the singular possessive form.The plural form of the noun thief is thieves.The plural possessive form is thieves'.Example: The thieves' hideout was raided by the police.
The word "thieves" is already plural. The singular is "thief."
The plural form of the noun thief is thieves.The plural possessive form is thieves' (just the apostrophe).Example: The thieves' car hit a stop sign and foiled their getaway.
The singular form of the plural noun thieves is thief.
The plural form for the noun thief is thieves.
The plural of tragedy is tragedies.
"Thief" is a singular noun. The plural form is "thieves."
The form thief's is the singular possessive form.The plural form of the noun thief is thieves.The plural possessive form is thieves'.Example: The thieves' hideout was raided by the police.
Thieves is already plural. The singular is thief.
The word "thieves" is already plural. The singular is "thief."
Thieves is the plural. The singular form of the verb is thief.
The plural of chief is 'chiefs.' However the plural of thief is 'thieves.'
The plural form of the noun thief is thieves.The plural possessive form is thieves' (just the apostrophe).Example: The thieves' car hit a stop sign and foiled their getaway.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun thief (a person who steals) is he or she as a subject, and him or her as the object of a sentence or a preposition.
The words ending in -ief can form normal plurals. In this case, it is chiefs.An example of the other form is thief, which becomes thieves.