orthodontist
Dentist
The word for a person who attends school is "student."
drover
Yes, "attendee" is a word. It refers to a person who is present at an event or gathering.
The word attends isn't a pronoun. It's the present tense, third person singular conjugation of the verb attend. Example:Jack attends to the yard work.Jill attends dance class on Friday afternoon.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The plural pronouns that take the place of 'Jack and Jill' are 'they' as a subject and 'them' as an object. Example:They keep very busy. Their parents are proud of them.
dentures??
patron or a patron of the arts.
People is a community of more than one person, whereas peoples is a collective noun for more than one people.
The word 'aboriginal' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'aboriginal' is a word for someone belonging to one of the indigenous peoples of Australia; a word for a person.
Pelajar is an Indonesian word meaning student. A student is any person who enrolls and attends school in order to take classes for credit and to advance their education.
No. The correct recognised plural of person is people. If you were to use an apostrophe: people's then this would be a correct term to show possesion.
An odontologist is a person who studies of teeth and their surrounding tissues and with the prevention and cure of their diseases.
Magego is the Kikuyu word for the English word teeth.