The singular possessive form of "faculty" is "faculty's."
The collective noun for teachers is a faculty.
The singular is curriculum.
Curriculum is singular, curricula is plural.
The noun school is the singular form.The plural noun is schools.
The possessive form of the singular noun teacher is teacher's.Example: I put my homework on the teacher's desk.
singular
The knife's edge had been dulled when it hit the rock. Knife's is singular posessive. The knives' edges had been dulled when they hit the rock. Knives' is plural posessive.
The singular form of the noun is stapler. The singular posessive form of the noun would be stapler's. The plural form of the noun would be staplers. The plural posessive form of the noun would be staplers'
Faculty is singular (though it has multiple members), so use "has."
Singular (one faculty). The plural is faculties (two faculties) In American English, faculty and other similar nouns ( committee, government, staff etc) denoting groups of individuals take a singular verb: The faculty is on vacation. In British English, such nouns take a plural verb: The faculty are on vacation. So the correct answer to the question as asked is: Faculty is a singular noun that may (chiefly British) take a plural verb.
The word faculty used as a collective noun (group of teachers) can use either the singular third person pronoun (it), or the plural (they, them) depending on whetherthe faculty is acting as a whole or as individual members.The word faculty meaning a sense (e.g. in possession of your faculties) uses the singular third-person pronoun, it.
The noun form Williams' is a plural possessivenoun.The singular possessive noun is William's.Examples:Both of the Willams' last names are similar, William Jackson and William Johnson. (plural)My brother William's birthday is on Saturday. (singular)
The plural form of the singular noun 'company' is companies.The plural possessive form is companies'.Example: The companies' names on the directory are in alphabetic order.
No, the noun 'faculty' is a count noun, a word with a singular and a plural form. The plural form of the noun is 'faculties'.
The term academic regalia is singular, referring to the traditional attire worn by graduates and faculty during academic ceremonies.
In alphabetical order it would be names singular (no posessive), then 's (possessive), then plural with s endings, then plura-possessive ending in s (with the s' possessive). Example: baby - singular no possessive baby's - singular possessive babies - plural, no posessive babies' - plural possessive
The faculty believes that the environment influences individuals and groups. you use believes because the subject faculty is speaking of the faculty as one. So the subject is singular, that means the verb has to be plural, according to subject verb agreement.The faculty believes that the environment influences the individuals and groups.