The noun class is singular.
The plural form is classes.
Class is singular (even though it ends in an -s). One class, in the possessive, is class's. "The class's group project is due next Monday." But if it's more than one class, you have classes. And classes' is the plural possessive form.
It can be either one. examples: Do you have any boys in your class? (boys = plural) Is there any girl who wants to play football? (girl = singular)
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.
Who may be singular or plural.
The word "you're" is a contraction, a combination of the pronoun "you" and the verb "are".In the contractions "you're", the pronoun can be singular or plural.Examples:Jack, you're excused. (singular)Class, you're all excused. (plural)
It is already singular, plural would be classes
The noun 'class' is a countable noun, a noun that has a singular and a plural form.Examples:I'm late for my dance class. (singular)My dance classes are expensive, I can't afford to miss them. (plural)Which class of fungus is this? (singular)How many classes of fungus are there? (plural)
Yes, the noun 'class' is the singular form. The plural noun is classes.
1. Singular possessed object, singular. Kou (o-class); kāu (a-class); kō (neutral class). 2. Singular possessed object, dual. Kō ʻolua (o-class); kā ʻolua (a-class). 3. Singular possessed object, plural. Kō ʻoukou (o-class); kā ʻoukou (a-class). 4. Plural possessed objects, singular. Ou (o-class); āu (a-class). 5. Plural possessed objects, dual. O ʻolua (o-class); a ʻolua (a-class). 6. Plural possessed objects, plural. Ō ʻoukou (o-class); a ʻoukou (a-class).
The noun class's is the possessive form of the singular noun class.Adding the apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the noun indicates that something belongs to a class.Example: Our class's trip is tomorrow.The plural noun is classes.Example: I have four classes tomorrow.The plural possessive form is classes'.Example: All of my classes' grades have improved. (the grades for all of my classes)
Classwork is singular. Classworks is plural.
In English, it is samurai, singular or plural. This is because it is a class of person.
Class is singular (even though it ends in an -s). One class, in the possessive, is class's. "The class's group project is due next Monday." But if it's more than one class, you have classes. And classes' is the plural possessive form.
yes, because one class would be a class, but multiple would be classes.
Class is singular (even though it ends in an -s). One class, in the possessive, is class's. "The class's group project is due next Monday." But if it's more than one class, you have classes. And classes' is the plural possessive form.
I was taught in grammar class that singular is abbreviated to "sing." while plural is abbreviated to "plur."
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)