The word bird is the singular form of the plural noun birds.
The form birds' is the pluralpossessive form.Example: All of the the birds' chirping woke me very early today.The possessive form of the singular noun bird is bird's.Example: A bird's nest sits right outside my kitchen window.
The possessive form of the singular noun mink is mink's.example: A mink's diet consists of birds, small animals, and fish.
Aves (it's Latin, so the singular is not ave, but rather avis) is the class for birds. As horses are not birds, the answer is no. Horses are mammals in class Mammalia.
The noun 'animal' is a countable noun. The plural form is animals.
The noun 'birds' is the plural form for the singular 'bird', a common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
flock. A flock of birds, sheep, or goats is a group of them. Flock can take the singular or plural form of the verb.
Yes, the word birds is a plural, common noun; a word for any birds of any kind; the plural form for the singular noun bird.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Charlie 'Bird' Parker, jazz musicianBirds Landing, CA (population 130)Birds Barbershop, Austin, TX'The Birds', 1963 Alfred Hitchcock movie
"A pair" is a collective noun used as a singular noun. Thus, it would be correct to say, "A pair ... is ..."
A singular word for a group of people or things taken together as one whole is a collective noun; for example, a crowd of people, a flock of birds, a grove of trees, etc.A collective noun can be plural when there are two or more groups; for example, crowds of people, flocks of birds, groves of trees.Example: Crowds of people converged in front of the capitol building.
Covey is a word for a flock of partridges or quail. The word covey is common, singular, group noun.
Yes, the word birds is a plural, common noun; a word for any birds of any kind; the plural form for the singular noun bird.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Charlie 'Bird' Parker, jazz musicianBirds Landing, CA (population 130)Birds Barbershop, Austin, TX'The Birds', 1963 Alfred Hitchcock movie
When the statement being made is about a situation in the past that actually occurred (not a hypothetical situation), then was is for singular subjects, and were is for plural."I was there.""They were not there.""We were there.""You and I were there."Exception: even though the subject you is singular, you use were."You were there."For situations where what you are saying is contrary to the facts (a hypothetical situation), were is always used.You are not feeling good, so you say, "If I were feeling well I would go."The organisms in questions are not in fact birds, so you say, "If they were birds they would have wings."