The indefinite pronoun 'some' can be used as singular of plural.
The plural use of the indefinite pronoun takes the place of an unspecified number of people or things.
Example: We sent out six inquiries and some have already responded.
The singular use of the the indefinite pronoun takes the place of a quantity as a unit.
Example: The bag has split and some has spilled out.
The indefinite pronoun 'some' can be used as a singular or a plural and can take a singular or plural verb; for example:Singular: Some is in the cupboard.Plural: Some are coming at six to help set up.The word some is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
Singular Plural is caterpillars
Steroids is plural. The singular form of the word is steroid.
The word crisis is singular. The plural form of crisis is crises.
Association is singular. Associations is plural.
The word team is singular; the plural form is teams.
These is plural, this is singular
Lance is singular. Lances is plural.
The indefinite pronoun 'some' can be used as a singular or a plural and can take a singular or plural verb; for example:Singular: Some is in the cupboard.Plural: Some are coming at six to help set up.The word some is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
The word 'Phenomenon' is singular. The plural form is 'Phenomena'.
The word metastasis is singular, metastases is plural.
The word "ground" can be both singular and plural. Singular: "The ground is wet." Plural: "The grounds of the park are well-maintained."
Louse is singular. The plural form is lice.
No, the word "list" is singular. The plural form of "list" is "lists."
It's singular. The plural is cafeterias.
Verbs cannot be singular or plural. Has is after singular nouns.
Tool is singular. Tools is plural.