NO. Use "flight of stairs"
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
The general collective noun for 'vehicles' is a fleet, for example:a fleet of carsa fleet of taxisa fleet of limosa fleet of trucksa fleet of buses
The noun 'fleet' is a standard collective noun for:a fleet of aircrafta fleet of planesa fleet of shipsa fleet of taxisa fleet of carsa fleet of lorries (trucks)a fleet of printersa fleet of bassa fleet of cootsa fleet of mud-hensa fleet of pigs
The noun 'fleet' is used as a collective noun for planes, ships, and motor vehicles; for example:a fleet of carsa fleet of taxisa fleet of shipsa fleet of planesa fleet of trucks
The Plural of 'Fleets' is Fleets... The Singular is Fleet eg. The commander had many fleets.
Flight of stairs and Fleet of ships.
No, a long flight of stairs a noisy gaggle of geese
yes, but it does depend on how long and how many stairs.
Yes because there are multiple cars in the fleet. Ex) You wouldn't say a fleet of soldier . . . you would say a fleet of soldiers
A slinky (of the correct size) can walk down the stairs.
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
No. A singular subject takes a singular verb: A fleet IS stranded.
You need a positional word to show the monster's relationship to the stairs: under, on, etc.
That is correct.
Yes
les escaliers (often used in the plural, but also correct in the singular)
To cut stairs to fit a specific space, measure the area carefully and mark where the cuts need to be made on the stairs. Use a saw to carefully cut the stairs to the correct size, ensuring they fit the space properly. Be precise and take your time to avoid mistakes.