Peoples is already plural, there is no plural for it....
Examples:
The English are a people who stress courtesy in speech.
The English and French have been two rival peoples for centuries.
Peoples is already plural, there is no plural for it.... Examples: The English are a people who stress courtesy in speech. The English and French have been two rival peoples for centuries.
Peoples isn't a word. The noun people is the plural form for person. The possessive form requires an apostrophe -s, not just the -s. For example: Singular possessive: person's Plural possessive: persons' Plural possessive: people's
The word 'people' can be either singular or plural in meaning. The approximate meaning when it is singular is 'a group of persons united by some sort of common thread'. In this sense, the word 'people' has a plural form 'peoples'. For example 'He travelled extensively in the Far East and lived among many different peoples.' When the meaning of the word 'people' is plural, it does not have a plural form. For example 'There are many people in the country who do not agree with the Government's policies.'
It is usually used as the plural of person.Yes, the noun people is a plural noun; the singular is person. Examples:The people at the library were very helpful.The person at the library was very helpful.
They are two separate words, so it would depend on whether it was plural or possessive.The plural noun peoples indicates separate societies or cultures.The possessive form people's is for things of or pertaining to people (e.g. the people's choice).
Peoples is already plural, there is no plural for it.... Examples: The English are a people who stress courtesy in speech. The English and French have been two rival peoples for centuries.
The Peoples' court :}
Peoples isn't a word. The noun people is the plural form for person. The possessive form requires an apostrophe -s, not just the -s. For example: Singular possessive: person's Plural possessive: persons' Plural possessive: people's
If you're using persons as the plural of person, then the plural possessive of persons is persons'.If you're using people as the plural of person, then the plural possessive is people's.(People meaning ethnic groups can have a plural peoples.)
The word "people" is a plural noun, not directly from the word person. When using "people" to mean a race or cultural group, the plural is peoples.
Peoples is a plural term referring to different types of people, such as people from different areas or countries. The earthquake affected many different peoples.
The correct possessive form of the plural noun people is people's.An irregular plural noun that doesn't end with -s forms the possessive the same as a singular possessive noun.
The word peoples is an incorrect form. The noun people is the plural form without adding the s at the end.The singular possessive form is person's.The plural possessive form is people's.example: You can't change other people's attitude, but you can change your own.
The word 'people' can be either singular or plural in meaning. The approximate meaning when it is singular is 'a group of persons united by some sort of common thread'. In this sense, the word 'people' has a plural form 'peoples'. For example 'He travelled extensively in the Far East and lived among many different peoples.' When the meaning of the word 'people' is plural, it does not have a plural form. For example 'There are many people in the country who do not agree with the Government's policies.'
The noun 'people' is a plural noun.The singular noun is 'person'.The word 'people' is also a verb: people, peoples, peopling, peopled.
The plural noun in this sentence is speeches and the possessive noun is people's.
No, but some plural words have other meanings that can be pluralized. The plural "peoples" refers to more than one "people" (collective noun for an ethnic group).