The word thieves is the plural form for the noun thief, a common noun; a word for someone who steals from others, a person.
Common
The singular form of the plural noun thieves is thief.
The possessive form of the plural noun thieves is thieves'.Example: The thieves' hideout was raided by the police.
The possessive form of the plural noun thieves is thieves'.Example: The thieves' hideout was raided by the police.
his father was the leader of forty thieves, that is what made him the prince of thieves and able to marry jasmine
"Thief" is a singular noun. The plural form is "thieves."
Yes, the word thieves is a noun, a plural form for the noun thief; someone who steals from others, a person.
The plural form for the noun thief is thieves.
The possessive form for the plural noun is thieves'.
Any number can be a noun. It can also be a pronoun. It is an adjective when it defines a number of objects (e.g. forty thieves).
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
The word thieves is a plural, common, abstract noun; a word for persons that steal other people's property. Although thieves is a word for people, it is an abstract noun because it isn't a physical aspect of a person, thief is a behavior of the person.
The plural form of the noun thief is thieves.The plural possessive form is thieves' (just the apostrophe).Example: The thieves' car hit a stop sign and foiled their getaway.