No, the noun phrase "the forest trees" is plural based on the plural noun "trees".
The word "big" is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
To be a possessive form, add an apostrophe s to the end of the singular noun "forest": the forest's trees (also, the big forest's trees or the forest's big trees).
The plural form of the word 'forest' is 'forests'.
The singular possessive form is forest's.
The plural of forest is forests.
forests
Forest's
The word forest is a noun. The plural is forests.
The foxes have run into the forest or The foxes have run into the forests
The noun forests is not a proper noun; forests common noun, the plural form for the singular, forest, a word for any forest anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, a place, a thing, or a title; for example:Thomas J. Forest MD, Lafayette, LATahoe National Forest, CAForest Park Drive, New York, NY or Forest Street, Reno, NVForests of the World, Durham, NC (fair-trade wholesaler)Forest Park Elementary School, Boynton Beach, FL'Once Upon a Forest', 1993 Hanna-Barbera animated feature film
The verb of loss is lose.Other verbs are loses, losing and lost.Some examples are:"I will try nit to lose"."We are losing"."He loses the keys again""We lost him in the forest"
When I went to the forest I saw a deer.
The word forest is singular.The plural would be forests.An example sentence with the singular is: I love the view of the forest from my window.An example sentence with the plural is: we have explored many forests all over the world.
forests
This is singular. These is the plural form.
The word forest is a noun. The plural is forests.
The foxes have run into the forest or The foxes have run into the forests
The plural form of the noun wolf is wolves.The plural possessive form is wolves'.Example: This forest is the wolves' territory.
Forests
It is the plural of wood or forest (coill).
The plural form for the noun forest is forests. The plural possessive form is forests'.Example: The committee was formed to study the impact of our forests' land use.
The word 'forests' is a common, plural, concrete noun.
There were nine sheep in the competition, but Elmer's sheep was the winner.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "rainforests" (all one word).