army NC
The plural of corps (pronounced kor), meaning a division of an army forming a tactical unit; branch or department of an army e.g. Army Medical Corps, Adjutant General's Corps; an organised body, group of people working more or less together is corps (pronounced korz)
The three branches of the US Army that came together to form the logistics branch are the Quartermaster Corps, the Ordnance Corps, and the Transportation Corps. This merger occurred in 2008 to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Army's logistics operations.
No. The ANZACs were the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.
Australia and New Zealand did not jointly form an army. Each country had its own relatively newly formed army and, for the purposes of fighting in World War 1, the two armies were merged into what became known as the "Australian and New Zealand Army Corps" or ANZAC as it better known.
Both the singular and plural form is corps; the singular or plural possessive is corps'.
staff nurse
The British Army Air Corps was founded in 1911, using balloons and later aircraft, it was joined with the Royal Naval Air Service to form the RAF in 1918, but re appeared to fly gliders in WW2 and now operates Army Helicopters. The US Army Air Corps formed out of the US Air Service in 1926 (the Air Service having been formed in spring 1918) and became the USAF in 1941 - although the paperwork took a while to sort out. The modern Air component of the Army is the Aviation Branch - starting in the 1950's with helicopter units and Air Cav and formally reappearing in 1983. The French formed their Air Corps in 1909 - becoming a separate "Armee de l'Air" in 1933, they formed a new Air Corps similar to the British Helicopter one in 1954. Most countries have one... which did you mean?
You can not. A butterfly is an adult form that lives only a short time. It has no capacity or need to be able to heal itself.
The possessive form for "nurse" is "nurse's." So if you're talking about the stethoscope belonging to a nurse, you'd say "the nurse's stethoscope." Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Nurses is the plural of nurse. Nurses' is the possessive form of nurse.
The plural form for the noun nurse is nurses.
National cadet corps