The plural of thousand is thousands. e.g. There are thousands of locusts in that field. When used to denote a particular number, it remains as just 'thousand', e.g. Six thousand two hundred and eight.
Yes, because thousand is a singular noun. So thousands is a plural noun.
No, the noun 'thousands' is a plural noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'thousand'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example, a herd of horses or a bouquet of flowers.
The plural noun is years. To spell out year names, use the hundreds of years, followed by the last two digits as a number. (Use "oh" for a leading zero) 1840 = eighteen forty 1700 = seventeen hundred 1901 = nineteen oh one 2012 = twenty twelve Even thousands are spoken as thousands: 2000 is "two thousand."
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "thousands."
Yes, because thousand is a singular noun. So thousands is a plural noun.
The singular is "millenium"; "millenia" is the plural. "Millenium" means a thousand years.
The word long is an adjective, and as such, it does not have a plural form. Adjectives remain the same whether describing a singular or plural noun. You can have one long string, or a thousand long strings, the word remains long.
The correct term is "two thousand." When referring to a specific quantity of thousands, you would use the singular form "thousand" followed by the specific number, such as "two thousand." The plural form "two thousands" would be incorrect in this context.
The term "thousand" refers to the numerical value of 1,000, while "thousands" is a plural form indicating a quantity greater than one thousand. For example, if you have 3,000 items, you would say you have "thousands" of items. "Thousand" is singular and specific, while "thousands" is plural and represents a larger, unspecified quantity.
The word "thousands" is a noun. It is a plural form of "thousand," which denotes a large number or amount.
"milli-" comes from the Latin noun "mīlle", meaning a thousand, or "mīlia" for the plural form (thousands)
a thousand is spelled 'mille' in French. You never put a 's' at the end of mille, even when there are several of them. - j'ai compté vingt mille personnes (I counted twenty thousand people) But the noun 'millier' (a quantity of one thousand) takes the s as a plural mark: ils étaient plusieurs milliers (they were several thousand)
No, the noun 'thousands' is a plural noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'thousand'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example, a herd of horses or a bouquet of flowers.
The plural noun is years. To spell out year names, use the hundreds of years, followed by the last two digits as a number. (Use "oh" for a leading zero) 1840 = eighteen forty 1700 = seventeen hundred 1901 = nineteen oh one 2012 = twenty twelve Even thousands are spoken as thousands: 2000 is "two thousand."
The singular noun is journey.Examples:A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. (singular)Marco Polo wrote of his journeys in "The Travels of Marco Polo". (plural)