No. If there is only one daddy and one stepmother and one daughter then you don't write the word as plural. Daddies means more than one daddy.
If the characters are singular then you need to have 'a' before complicated/wicked/daughter.
A picture book story about a complicated daddy, awicked stepmother and a daughter, who learn to be brave in the dark woods.
Criterion is singular. The word criteria is actually the plural.
"Dues" is actually a plural noun. The singular form is "due."
The possessive form of the singular noun 'daughter' is daughter's.example: This is a gift for my daughter's birthday.
actually, its plural
The singular value decomposition is a component of a real complicated matrix with many useful applications in signal processing and statistics. The singular value decomposition and the eigen decomposition are very closely related.
No the word complicated is not a noun. It is an adjective and a verb.
You should write daughter's if you are talking about one daughter, e.g. "it is my daughter's birthday tomorrow".You should write daughters' if you are talking about more than one daughter at the same time, e.g. "this is our daughters' bedroom, which they share".
Just add an apostrophe followed by 's' to all of them. This is not complicated!
The simplest answer is that the word 'are' is plural, and the word 'is' is singular. she is, he is, they are, we are It is a little more complicated than that. I'm sure someone will add to this.
Phenomena is a plural noun. The singular form is phenomenon. There is some tendency to use phenomena as a singular noun, but it is not actually a legitimate form.
Isthmi is plural. There are actually two plural forms. I will list them from singular to plural. Isthmus - Singular Isthmi - Plural Isthmuses - Plural
Figlie del re is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "daughters of the king."Specifically, the feminine noun figlie means "daughters." The word del combines the preposition di and the masculine singular definite article il to mean "of the." The masculine noun remeans "king."The pronunciation is "FEE-lyeh dehl reh."