Trustees is the plural of trustee. "The trustees had no idea where the money went"
The noun 'team' is a singular noun. The plural form is teams.
The noun 'crew' is a singular noun, a word for one group of workers; the plural form is crews.
The noun 'pants' is both the singular and the plural.Pants is from the group of nouns that sound plural, but are in fact singular or plural. This is because the word pants is actually a shortened form of 'a pair of pants' (pair is singular). Other examples from this group are shorts, glasses, binoculars, scissors, etc.
Are is plural. "Is" is singular. For example, "There is a glove on the chair". That is singular. "There are gloves on the chair". That is plural.
No. The door is not a collective noun. Why? Collective Nouns name people, animals, or things that are considered as one group or a whole. A collective noun may be singular or plural in form. It is singular when the group is acting as a whole. A singular verb is used. When members of the group do things individually on their own, then the noun is plural in form. A plural verb is used. #CarryOnLearning:) #UwU
The possessive form of the plural noun trustees is trustees'.
"Jury" can be both singular and plural. When referring to the group as a whole, it is singular (e.g. "The jury reaches a verdict"). When referring to the individuals within the group, it is plural (e.g. "The jury are discussing the case").
The noun 'team' is a singular noun. The plural form is teams.
The noun phrase 'group of children' is singular, one group.The noun 'children' is the plural form of the singular noun 'child'.The noun phrase 'group of children' is a term form one group of two or more children.
The noun "cattle" is only plural, never singular; a plural uncountable noun, a word for domesticated bovines as a group.
No. It is a group noun that uses a singular verb. The plural is bunches.
Its like the word family. It refers to a group of people (plural) but is a the noun personnel is singular.
The noun 'crew' is a singular noun, a word for one group of workers; the plural form is crews.
"All" can be used as a plural or singular noun, depending on the context. When referring to a group or collection as a whole, it is considered singular, but when individual items within the group are being emphasized, it can be treated as plural.
The phrase "everyone of you" is technically singular because "everyone" is a singular pronoun. However, it is often used informally with a plural connotation to address a group of people.
Not as a plural of a singular noun. Once it is plural, it is already a multiple.However, group nouns that can use a singular verb form can be made plural to indicate more than one group or instance, such as family-families and staff-staffs.ALSO, a few plural nouns have homonyms that are singular, and these can be made plural.One example is people, which is a plural noun, but also has a singular meaning as "a race of individuals" which can be pluralized as peoples.
The apostrophe after the s denotes a group of riders, so is plural.