No, one ship, two ships.
ship
Ships' is the plural possessive, meaning belonging to a number of ships.
The plural is buccaneers. The plural possessive is buccaneers'.Example: The buccaneers' ship wrecked on the reef, marooning them.
The plural form of "ship of the line" is "ships of the line." This term refers to a type of naval warship that was built for battle in the line of battle tactics used from the 17th to the 19th centuries. Each ship in this category was designed for the purpose of engaging in fleet actions and forming battle lines.
a synonym for vessel is hi my name is Jacob
"Noughts" =the plural of 'zero'. "-nauts" is a suffix used for the crew of a vessel - generally a ship or spaceship.
The possessive form of the plural noun seamen is seamen's.A plural noun that does not end with an s forms the plural by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word, the same as a singular noun.Example: The seamen's teamwork is essential for many tasks aboard a ship.
Lofes is the plural form of the word lofer in French. The English translation is luff, which is a part of the sail near the mast on a ship.
No, caravels is a noun, a common, plural noun. The singular form is caravel. The appropriate pronoun to use for a caravel (a type of ship) is it.
Actually, the tern "ship In a bottle" is the proper term. For the plural, it would be "ships-in-bottles". You can use hyphens or not. Interestingly, one organization for it is called SIBAA: Ships In Bottles Association of America.
cargoes is the plural of cargo. strict meaning is goods carried by ship. cargo = freight, load, shipment, contents, goods
The word for rib in the Latin language is costa, (plural=costae), if you mean the rib bone. If you mean the rib of a ship, the word is statumen.