The word 'someone' is a singular, indefinite pronoun. It has no plural form.
The pronoun 'someone' takes the place of an unknown or unnamed singular noun for one person.
An antonym for 'someone' is the indefinite pronoun 'everyone'.
There is no plural form of the indefinite pronoun someone, a word for one person. The plural indefinite pronoun 'everyone' is a word for all of the people, but there is no indefinite pronoun for in between one person and all of the people.
The word 'snoopy' (lower case s) is an adjective. Adjectives don't have singular and plural forms.The word 'snoopy' is the adjective form of the noun snoop(plural snoops), a word for someone who minds other people's business; a word for someone who secretly investigates; a word for a person.Note: The word 'Snoopy' (capital S) is a proper noun, the name of a cartoon dog. The proper noun 'Snoopy' doesn't have a plural form, there is only one.
The plural form of bibliography is bibliographies.
The word 'cheat' is a noun as a word for someone who behaves dishonestly in order to gain an advantage; a fraud or swindle; a word for a person or a thing.The noun forms of the verb to cheat are cheater and the gerund, cheating.
Children is a plural noun. The singular is child.
Brains is both a plural usage of the word, and slang terminology to imply hitting someone about the head.
The word "someone" is singular. It refers to an unknown or unspecified person.
It is singular hence the word 'one'.
It is singular hence the word 'one'.
There is no plural form of the indefinite pronoun someone, a word for one person. The plural indefinite pronoun 'everyone' is a word for all of the people, but there is no indefinite pronoun for in between one person and all of the people.
The word 'athletes' is the plural form of the nounathlete, a word for someone who is proficient in sports or other forms of physical exercise; a word for a person.
The word 'snoopy' (lower case s) is an adjective. Adjectives don't have singular and plural forms.The word 'snoopy' is the adjective form of the noun snoop(plural snoops), a word for someone who minds other people's business; a word for someone who secretly investigates; a word for a person.Note: The word 'Snoopy' (capital S) is a proper noun, the name of a cartoon dog. The proper noun 'Snoopy' doesn't have a plural form, there is only one.
The plural personal pronoun for the singular "he" is "they."The singular possessive is his and the plural possessive is their or theirs.A possessive adjective is a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something. The plural possessive adjective for "they" is their.Example: Those are their books.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. The plural possessive pronoun for "they" is theirs.Example: Those books are theirs.
The singular pronoun "she" has the plural "they."The singular possessive is her or hers and the plural possessive is their or theirs.A possessive adjective is a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something. The plural possessive adjective for "they" is their.Example: Those are their books.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. The plural possessive pronoun for "they" is theirs.Example: Those books are theirs.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
The plural form for the noun handful is handfuls; the plural possessive is handfuls'.
The word "surroundings" is a noun. It refers to the things around someone or something.