Alumnus.
Alumni is the plural of alumnus; the feminine form alumni is alumnae. The feminine form of alumnus is alumna.
Alumnus (singular) Alumni (plural)
Alumni is not a verb, but a noun, and therefore does not have past tense form.
The noun alumni is the plural form; the correct verb form is have. Examples:The alumni have a meeting at one.An alumnus has donated funds for the lab equipment.
"Alumnus" is singular and refers to a male graduate. The plural form for male graduates is "alumni," while the singular for a female graduate is "alumna," and the plural is "alumnae."
The singular masculine for alumni is "alumnus". The singular feminine is "alumna". Both are shortened informally to "alum". As in "He's an alum of Ohio State."
The singular form of alumni is "alumnus" for male individuals, and "alumna" for female individuals.
alumni
No, the singular is alumna and the plural is alumnae.The other forms are the singular alumnus and the plural alumni.
The word 'alumni' is already a plural. Alumni is the plural of the singular word alumnus. The feminine form of alumnus is alumna, and the plural of alumna is alumnae.
Alumnus is singular; alumni is plural. The origin of the word alumnus is Latin and uses the Latin plural form.
Alumna is a Latin word. (It is the feminine form of alumnus, plural alumni).And the feminine Latin plural of alumna is alumnae.