The word 'plural' is an adjective used to describe a noun as more than one.
The word 'plural' is a noun as word for a part of speech; a noun for more than one person, place, or thing.
The word 'plural' is both an adjective and a noun. The noun plural is a word for a form of a word used to show more than one person or thing; a word or term in the plural form. Example: The plural for sheep is sheep.
The word is of Latin origin and the plural is addenda.
The word "police" is plural and it takes a plural verb.
The word "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" is an adjective, and has no plural.
the word dozen is already plural.
The word 'people' can be either singular or plural in meaning. The approximate meaning when it is singular is 'a group of persons united by some sort of common thread'. In this sense, the word 'people' has a plural form 'peoples'. For example 'He travelled extensively in the Far East and lived among many different peoples.' When the meaning of the word 'people' is plural, it does not have a plural form. For example 'There are many people in the country who do not agree with the Government's policies.'
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
kedabra is sort of like deer its plural and singular are the same
There is no plural word for if.
The plural word for delay is delays.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.
Yes, the word 'types' is the plural form for the noun type. The word 'types' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to type. noun: We sort the types of recyclables in these bins. verb: He types the text and I proofread the copy.
A non-plural word, a word (noun or pronoun) that is not plural is singular, a word for just one.
the plural word is comedones
No it's a singular word. A plural word would be "have".
The plural of the word "raisin" is "raisins."
The plural of the word brush is brushes. As in "she brushes her hair".