wings
What is the plural of wings
The plural possessive noun would be written as the butterflies' wings.
insect's example: The insect's wing is damaged.
a wing = une aile, wings = des ailes
Aerodynamics in itself is plural. Aerodynamic would be the singular form. Example: The airplanes wing was very aerodynamic. This would mean that the wing is capable of producing lift, drag etc. The plural form would be aerodynamics because you are talking about a wide range of ideas related to an object going through the air.
Yes, the word 'wing' is both a noun (wing, wings) and a verb (wing, wings, winging, winged).Examples:Our seats are over the wing of the plane. (noun)He feels enough confidence to wing it on his own. (verb)
The plural form for the noun bee is bees.The plural possessive is bees'.Example: The bees' humming is a sound of summer.
The word swept is the past participle, past tense of the verb to sweep (He swept the floor.), and an adjective, a word that describes a noun (The plane had a swept wing.). There is no plural form for a verb or an adjective. Nouns and pronouns have plural forms.
No. Wings is a plural noun, or a verb form (to wing). The word "winged" can be an adjective meaning having wings.
As a plural noun, butterflies does not need an apostrophe. Apostrophes are not used to make nouns plural.As a possessive noun, butterflies does needan apostrophe. The plural form is butterflies' (the butterflies' wing). Apostrophes are used to show possession.
wing and wing
" asas " (It´s a feminine noun; you should say " a asa " [the wing], " as asas " [the wings], " uma asa " [a /OR/ one wing], " umas asas " [(some / OR SIMPLY...) wings]. Its pronunciation (or spelling, as you normally say) is like in English "AH-za" / plural: "AH-zaz" (caps: stressed syllable).