The collective noun is a crush of shoppers; the plural form is crushes of shoppers.
The plural of shopper is shoppers, and the possessive plural is shoppers'.
Shoppers' is the possessive form.
shopper's
The collective noun is a crush of shoppers.
No, the word 'appliances' is not a collective noun, it is the plural form of the noun appliance.
No, the word facts is the plural form for the noun fact; not a collective noun.
The collective noun is a house of senators.
No, the noun 'taxes' is not a collective noun; taxes is the plural form for the noun tax. However, any noun can function as a collective noun in a suitable context without being a designated collective noun.
The collective noun is a crush of shoppers.
When a plural noun ends with an s, add an apostrophe after the s to form the possessive.The possessive form of the plural noun shoppers is shoppers'.Example: We try to make our shoppers' experience enjoyable.
The noun shoppers is the plural form of the singular noun shopper. A plural noun does not use an apostrophe.When an apostrophe (') is added to the s at the end of the word, it becomes the plural possessive form: shoppers'Examples:We're expecting many shoppers today. (plural noun)This display should catch the shoppers' attention. (plural possessive noun; the attention of the shoppers)
A plural noun represents more than one of something. For example, 'flowers' is plural for 'flower'. Common, proper, abstract and collective nouns can all have plural forms. A collective noun is a singular (not plural) noun that represents a 'group' of things. For example, 'herd' is a collective noun for animals such as sheep and cows. Collective nouns can have plural forms; for example, 'herds' is the plural form of 'herd'.
No, the word 'appliances' is not a collective noun, it is the plural form of the noun appliance.
No, the noun zoo is not a standard collective noun. However, any noun suitable to the situation can be used as a collective noun, for example a zoo of Black Friday shoppers or a zoo of rock concert goers.
No, the word facts is the plural form for the noun fact; not a collective noun.
No, the plural noun events is not a collective noun, nor is the singular form, event.However the collective noun for events is a series of events.
The collective noun is a house of senators.
The noun audience is a singular, common noun. The noun audience is also a collective noun.
The collective noun is a pair of shoelaces.
No, Mondays is a plural, proper noun.