The noun 'equipment' is an uncountable noun because it is a type of aggregate noun, a word that represents any number of elements or parts. It has no plural form. Units of equipment are expressed as some equipment, a lot of equipment, little equipment, etc.
Equipment is a singular mass noun, it has no plural form, e.g.: The equipment is broken.
The plural form for the singular noun engineer is engineers.
The singular possessive form for hydraulics is hydraulics'. The noun hydraulics is the singular form, there is no plural form. If you remove the ending 's' the word hydraulic is the adjective form.
The possessive form of the singular noun plumber is plumber's.example: The plumber's assistant carried all of the equipment.
Class's = the possessive form of the singular noun class.Classes' = the possessive form of the plural noun classes.Examples:The class's pet frog was called Robert. (one class had a pet frog called Robert)All of the classes' students were at the assembly. (the students from all classes were at the assembly)
Equipment is a singular mass noun, it has no plural form, e.g.: The equipment is broken.
The plural form for physics is "physics." It remains the same in both singular and plural form.
noun that are plural in form but singular in meaning
Yes, the noun sheep is both singular and plural.
The noun cousin is the singular form. The plural noun is cousins.
"Bee" can be both singular and plural. The singular possessive form is "bee's," while the plural possessive form is "bees'."
Both the singular and plural form is corps; the singular or plural possessive is corps'.
The word clay is both singular and plural.
Both the singular and the plural for the noun sheep is sheep.
The singular form of Sioux is "Sioux." It is both the singular and plural form of the word.
There is a plural form - payouts
The form 'larva' is singular; the form larvae and larvas are both accepted plural forms.