The plural form for the noun chicken is chickens; the plural possessive form is chickens'.
Hen is singular, hens is plural
It is singular.
The plural is hens.
The singular possessive noun in the sentence is:farmer's (the 's indicates that the wheat belongs to the farmer; one farmer)
The possessive noun is farmer's, showing the the wheat belongs to the farmer.
The word "breathe" in Hebrew is pronounced: "Linshom" (לנשום) (infinitive form).The different conjugations:I breathe:Ani noshem (masculine form)Ani noshemet (feminine form)You breathe (singular):Ata noshem (singular, masculine form)At noshemet (singular, feminine form)You breathe (plural):Atem noshmim (plural, masculine form)Aten noshmot (plural, feminine form)He breathes:Hoo noshemShe breathes:Hee noshemetThey breathe:Hem noshmim (masculine form)Hen noshmot (feminine form)
The possessive of all English PLURALS ending in -s is formed by adding an apostrophe: hens'
The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'hen' are:personal pronouns she as a subject and her as an object in a sentence;personal pronoun it as a subject or an object in a sentence;possessive adjectives hers or its to take the place of a noun that belongs to the hen;possessive adjectives her or its to describe a noun as belonging to the hen;reflexive pronouns herself or itself to 'reflect back' to the hen.
"Hen" is an English equivalent of the Italian word gallina.Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its singular form. It literally means "hen" and loosely as "woman" or pejoratively "airhead". The pronunciation will be "gal-LEE-na" in Italian.
The gender specific pronouns that take the place of a singular noun for a male are:personal pronouns-he as a subject, and him as an object in a sentence;possessive pronoun-hispossessive adjective-hisreflexive pronoun-himselfintensive pronoun-himselfExamples:Martin has a nice garden. He gives me flowers and I bake cookies for him.Martin lives on this street. The house with the garden is his. (possessive pronoun)Martin lives on this street. His house has the garden. (possessive adjective)Martin made himself a garden salad. (reflexive pronoun)Martin himself grew the vegetables for the salad. (intensive pronoun)
Gallina is an Italian equivalent of the English word "hen."Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article la means "the." Its singular indefinite article una means "a, one."The pronunciation is "gahl-LEE-nah."
A young male bird under 6 months is a cock, a young female under 6 months is a pullet. After they are over 6 months they become known as a rooster and a hen.