Those is the plural form of that. That (singular) and those (plural) are the objective form of demonstrative pronouns.
The plural of "that" is "those."
The word that is singular. Examples:Singular, That boy is my friend. Plural, Those boys are my friends.Singular, I like that. Plural, I like them. I like those.
The singular pronoun "she" has the plural "they."The singular possessive is her or hers and the plural possessive is their or theirs.A possessive adjective is a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something. The plural possessive adjective for "they" is their.Example: Those are their books.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. The plural possessive pronoun for "they" is theirs.Example: Those books are theirs.
The plural personal pronoun for the singular "he" is "they."The singular possessive is his and the plural possessive is their or theirs.A possessive adjective is a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something. The plural possessive adjective for "they" is their.Example: Those are their books.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. The plural possessive pronoun for "they" is theirs.Example: Those books are theirs.
Those can be a determiner eg Those people are from out of town Those can be a demonstrative pronoun, the plural form of that eg I like those over there
The plural form of the demonstrative pronoun 'that' is those.
the word "those" is plural
The plural of that is those.e.g."That person and those people."
Plural
The word 'those' is a plural demonstrative pronoun.The demonstrative pronouns are 'this' and 'that' for the singular; 'these' and 'those' for the plural.
The word that is singular. Examples:Singular, That boy is my friend. Plural, Those boys are my friends.Singular, I like that. Plural, I like them. I like those.
The word that is singular. Examples:Singular, That boy is my friend. Plural, Those boys are my friends.Singular, I like that. Plural, I like them. I like those.
This is one of those words in English that the single and plural is the same word.
Actually, the word 'opera' is NOT a plural of a different word. (As far as I know.)The plural of the word 'opera', is 'operas', as in:"Those operas we saw were very boring."
Vermin is a word that is both plural and singular. i.e. There was a vermin in my house. i.e. Those rats are vermin.
That is the singular form; the plural form is those.
That is the correct spelling of the plural word "debaters" (those engaged in debate).
The word your can be both plural and singular. You may say to one person, "Is that your car?" You would also say to a group of people "Are those your cars?" Either way, the form of your does not change. The word "yours" is not a plural. It is the possessive form of your.