well i think that her is hers and his is just his
No one is a pronoun and is singular.
Several is plural, meaning more than one; there is no singular form of the word.
plural. She is a good parent. She takes after her parents.
Spacecraft is both singular and plural. You can have one spacecraft or many spacecraft.
The terms singular and plural are two types of grammatical number used to designate a word as a word for one (singular) or for two or more (plural).Examples:I gave my mom a flower. (singular; one flower)I gave my mom a bouquet of flowers. (plural; more than one flower)The boy was eating a hot dog. (singular; one boy, one hot dog)The boys were eating hot dogs. (plural; more than one boy, more than one hot dog)
The indefinite pronoun 'each' is a singularform, a word for 'every one of two or more'.Example: Each is taken in turn.
Plural is more than singular. Singular is only one and plural means more than one.
No one is a pronoun and is singular.
singular is one & plural is more than one
"Cracker" can be both singular and plural. When you refer to one individual cracker, it is singular. When you refer to multiple crackers, it is plural.
The noun 'hero' is singular (one hero).The plural noun is heroes.
Plural
if a word refers to a single item it is singular. if it refers to lots of things it is plural."Potato" is singular "potatoes" is a plural word."mouse" is singular, "mice" is a plural word."person" is singular, "people" is a plural word.
singular means one..plural means alot
Several is plural, meaning more than one; there is no singular form of the word.
singular = one - I have one dog. plural = more than one. I have two dogs.
The word each is an adjective used with a singular noun; each person or each page.The word each is also an adverb, used to modify a verb; They cost a dollar each.The word each is also a singular indefinite pronoun, one of a group seen as an individual; Each has an almond in the center.You can probably answer a question like this yourself by constructing example sentences and judging their acceptability. Compare "Each has a cookie" ("has" takes a singular subject) with "Each have a cookie" ("have" takes a plural subject). Which sounds better?