litters
The possessive form for the irregular plural noun puppies is puppies'.example: This is the first litter for the puppies' mother.
The word runt is a noun. The plural form is runts.
"Litter" is a noun and a verb and, as such, does not have a comparative degree.
The plural noun 'litters' is a common noun, a general word for the two or more groups of young animals born to the same mother at one time; a word for any litter of any animal.The word 'litters' is also the third person, singular of the verb to 'litter' (litters, littering, littered).Note: The noun 'litter' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for trash left lying in an open or public place.
Yes, there is such a possibility.There are many verbs that are also nouns. A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.EXAMPLESThe word litter is both a verb and a noun, it is also the collective noun for 'a litter of puppies'; the plural form is 'litters of puppies'.The word flock is both a verb and a noun, it is also the collective noun for 'a flock of tourists'; the plural form is 'flocks of tourists'.The word herd is both a verb and a noun, it is also the collective noun for 'a herd of cattle'; the plural form is 'herds of cattle'.The word cast is both a verb and a noun, it is also a collective noun for 'a cast of actors'; the plural form is 'casts of actors'.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
Depends on how the word litter is being used. Litter can be a noun, transitive verb or a intransitive verb.
Geese is the plural form of goose.
There is no plural word for if.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.
A non-plural word, a word (noun or pronoun) that is not plural is singular, a word for just one.
The plural word of delay is delays.