Scissors, poultry, deer, moose, sheep.....
Some examples of words that stay the same in singular and plural form are: sheep, deer, moose, and fish. These words are known as "unchangeable plurals" because they do not change in form when pluralized.
stout
The word is "I" which becomes "is".
The homonym of "once" is "wants." These words sound the same but have different meanings.
you can make the words not,in, on,sat,ton,rat,tar,tin,sin,vest,eat,no,rest,and if you can use letters more than once nation. i think there are more but it might take forever to list them all. So the answer is......... like 13 or 14.
bunce, ponce
"Bunce" and "guns" have the same vowel sound as "once".
Yes, the plural form is marshes. Example:The shoreline of Chicago was once a series of marshes.
The possessive form of the plural noun facilities is facilities'.Example: All of our facilities' managers meet once a year.
The delegates came to the conference in chauffeur driven cars and once parked up the chauffeurs got together for a chat.
The plural form for the noun 'hunt' is hunts'. Example sentence:Fox hunts were once the fashion on rural estates.The word 'hunt' is also a verb (hunts, hunting, hunted). The noun form for the verb is 'hunter', one who hunts, and the gerund (verbal noun) 'hunting'. Example sentence:Hunting was once a necessity but today it is sport for the hunter.
This question has already been asked and answered on this site, more than once. The answer is nuclei.It is a good idea to check whether your question has already been asked and answered before you ask the same thing yet again. That way, the people who you hope will help you do not have to waste their time, which means they will have more time available to answer questions that genuinely need answering (possibly including one of yours). You will also develop your own research skills by trying to find things out for yourself before you ask for help, which will be to your advantage in many ways.
Not as a plural of a singular noun. Once it is plural, it is already a multiple.However, group nouns that can use a singular verb form can be made plural to indicate more than one group or instance, such as family-families and staff-staffs.ALSO, a few plural nouns have homonyms that are singular, and these can be made plural.One example is people, which is a plural noun, but also has a singular meaning as "a race of individuals" which can be pluralized as peoples.
The personal pronouns I and it are singular only. The personal pronoun you is both singular and plural.The first person pronoun I is the subjective, the objective is me.The third person pronoun it is the subjective and the objective.The plural form for the subjective I is we; the plural form for the objective me is us.The plural form for the subjective it is they; the plural form for the objective it is them.The second person pronoun you is both singular and plural, both subjective and objective. Old English once used a different form for number and case:Nominative singular: ThouNominative plural: YeObjective singular: TheeObjective plural: YouBut, over the centuries, the form 'you' became used for all of these functions.
The noun 'duo' is a singular noun, a word for one group of two people or things (a pair).The plural noun is 'duos' a word for two or more groups of two people or things.
Here are some examples of nouns with the plural form ending in -ies -- you'll notice that the singular ends in -y:liberty - libertiesvictory - victoriescountry - countriesenemy - enemiesarmy - armies and navy - naviesdirty - dirtierhappy - happierduty - dutieslily - liliesreply - replieslady - ladiesspy - spiesstory - storiesbutterfly - butterfliesnappy - nappieshappy - happiescry-cries
The noun 'deer' does not change form from singular to plural.The singular possessive form is deer's.The plural possessive form is deer's.Example:In the morning we found a deer's footprints in the snow. (singular)In the morning we found several deer's footprints in the snow. (plural)
Weeks. As in, "I will be going on holiday for two weeks" or "There are 52 weeks in a year" If something occurs once a week, it is described as "weekly" Hope that helps
A balas is a variety of rose-coloured spinel once thought to have been a form of ruby.