The noun 'authors' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'author', a word for a person
The word 'authors' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to author.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun authors, in which case a noun that suits the situation can be used, for example, a symposium of authors, a staff of authors, a mob of authors.
The part of speech for "authors" is a noun, while "purpose" is a noun as well. Together, "authors purpose" is a noun phrase used to refer to an author's intent or reason for writing a piece of work.
Famous is an adjective; authors is a plural noun.
The plural form for the noun author is authors.The plural possessive form is authors'.Example: The authors' annual awards will be announced on Friday.
Yes, the word 'author' (authors) is a noun and a verb (author, authors, authoring, authored).Examples:This is the third best seller for this author. (noun)He will author the history of the settlement. (verb)
Perspective is a noun; author's is the possessive form.
The word author is a noun. The plural form is authors.
Yes, the word 'author' (authors) is a noun and a verb (author, authors, authoring, authored).Examples:This is the third best seller for this author. (noun)He will author the history of the settlement. (verb)
The plural form for the noun author is authors.The plural possessive form is authors'.Example: The authors' annual awards will be announced on Friday.
Yes, any proper noun can be a possessive noun. Some examples:Europe's capitals...Gene's family...The Lion King's producer...Hong Kong's harbor...The Bible's authors...Mars' moons...
The term Purplicious is a proper noun, a book title in the Pinkalicious series by authors Victoria Kann and Elizabeth Kann.
The noun author is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female writer.