The noun 'people' is a plural noun.
The singular noun is 'person'.
The word 'people' is also a verb: people, peoples, peopling, peopled.
The noun people is the plural form of the singular person.
People can mean a singular as well as a plural. I can give you two examples:1) There were many people on the street.obviously refers to plural.2) The governor spoke to a people of ministers at the assembly.here it is singular since its a collective noun. I am referring to an assembly of ministers
People's is plural possessive. That is because people is plural, so the 's is added. The singular possessive would be person's.
"The word 'person' can be used as either singular or plural. However, it is more commonly used as singular, while 'people' is used as the plural form."
No, the noun person is singular; the plural form is persons, or the irregular plural people.
It is usually used as the plural of person.Yes, the noun people is a plural noun; the singular is person. Examples:The people at the library were very helpful.The person at the library was very helpful.
if a word refers to a single item it is singular. if it refers to lots of things it is plural."Potato" is singular "potatoes" is a plural word."mouse" is singular, "mice" is a plural word."person" is singular, "people" is a plural word.
House is singular. Houses would be plural.
Have is both singular and plural. 'I have' refers to one person, 'I', so it is singular; yet 'We Have' refers to multiple people,'We', so it must be plural.
practitioner is singular (plural practitioners)sofa is singular (plural sofas)satellite is singular (plural satellites)clips is plural (singular clip)dentist is singular (plural dentists)dollars is plural (singular dollar)article is singular (plural articles)magazines is plural (singular magazine)laminator is singular (laminators is plural)radios is plural (singular radio)
The noun 'people' is a plural noun.The word 'other' is an adjective used to describe the noun 'people', forming a noun phrase.The singular noun phrase is 'other person'.
singular and plural