You would have to say,"One grain of rice."
The singular form of the word "rice" is still "rice."
Present.Example: "He has a book." [When does he have it?] He HAS it now.Has is the third person singular form (s form) of have. It is present tense. Has is used with he/she/it or a singular noun as subject.He likes rice. The teacher likes rice.
The word "rice" is a common noun.
"More shyly" is the comparative of "shyly". There is no single word form as with lowlier.
Yes, "household" is a compound word. It is made up of the words "house" and "hold" joined together to form a single word that refers to the people living together in a single residence.
It doesn't have a past tense as it's a noun.
No, Susan Rice is not single.
I had this question for my homework. The question was Rearrange the following group of letters to form a single word: snewgalrdoi. If you think hard, you will see Rearrange the following group of letters to form 'a single word'. Snewgalrdoi rearranged is 'a single word'.
Present.Example: "He has a book." [When does he have it?] He HAS it now.Has is the third person singular form (s form) of have. It is present tense. Has is used with he/she/it or a singular noun as subject.He likes rice. The teacher likes rice.
a grain of rice
The word Christmas is singular; the plural form is Christmases.
The farmer's rice bag.
I take it you mean 'What is the singular form of the word criteria?' If so, the answer is criterion.
The word you're looking for is.... paper !
The word rice is a non-count noun. The only time a plural form is used is when speaking of different types of rices. To use a non-count noun in units, we say a box of rice, a bag of rice, a cup of rice, a bowl of rice, etc.
The word 'goods' is a plural form. The noun 'goods' is an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of parts expressed in a single word. Aggregate nouns have no singular form.
Neither the single word "overprepared" or the hyphenated "over-prepared" have found consistent acceptance in dictionaries. Wiktionary lists the single word form.
There is no single common English word that uses all of the letters. It can form phrases such as "do fanfare" or "and an offer." The longest single word that can be made is fanfare.