Yes, for example:
There were many potatoes growing in the field.
There's also....
Potatoes are very yummy.
The potatoes mushy after smashing them with a hammer.
All the potatoes in the field died after the flood.
I will now peel the skin off of the potato.
Don't throw that potato at your sibling!
To make a potatoes shoe, carve out the inside then put it on your foot.
The farmer took a bite of a big juicy potato.
A potato gun is simple to make, and very effective.
Potatoes make great substitutes instead of a doll.
"Hey get back here!" yelled the store clerk after the kid stole the potato from the bin.
I like my potatoes fried and frenched. With ketchup.
It's nicer to say please use potatoes in a sentence than demanding me to.
Please use potatoes in a sentence.
That wasn't even as hard as a potato.
I've used potato in all these sentences.
Don't throw a potato at me!
i picked the potatoes from the garden for dinner tonight
More mashed potatoes, please!
There are eight potatoes in the bin.
potatoes are good to taste.
Potatoes
We are having baked potatoes and beans for dinner.
Please pass the mashed potatoes. Yes, I would like more mashed potatoes.
potatoes are delicious
"Add the potatoes to the boiling water." The chef projected. Potatoes grow out of the ground, you often have to dig a bit to reach them. Potatoes are a starchy food.
The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun potatoes are they as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and them as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:I've baked some potatoes for dinner. They are ready now.How do you like your potatoes? I like them mashed.
I like potatoes.
potatoes add starch to your diet.
Bring a jacket potato wrapped in foil to cook in a bonfire
Those potatoes are old and rotten
Wearily he trudged home after a hard day's digging potatoes.