Chinese. In this case, you do not add an s when referring to a group of people of a certain nationality. Example: The French are known for the exquisite taste in clothing. In some cases, you do, like when it ends in "-an." Example. The Germans and the Italians make great food.
The plural noun for Chinese is ....... Chinese.
The proper noun 'Yuan' (capital Y) has no plural form. The proper noun Yuan is the name of a Chinese dynasty (1279-1368) established by the Mongolian ruler Kublai Khan. There is no plural form because there was only one Yuan Dynasty. The common noun 'yuan' is a unit of Chinese currency. The singular noun yuan is used as an uncountable noun (60 yuan) or a count noun (60 yuans), both are accepted forms.
"I love you all" in Traditional Chinese is "我愛你們." In Simplified Chinese, this is 我爱你们. It is pronounced "Wo3 ai4 ni3men" in Hanyu Pinyin and "Woo ay nii.men" in GR romanization. Here's a breakdown: 我 - I 爱 - love 你们 - Plural you/ you all
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
chinese's is the plural form of chinese............ :) <3
The plural noun for Chinese is ....... Chinese.
The plural form of "Chinese" is "Chinese." The word stays the same in both the singular and plural forms.
The noun Chinese is both singular and plural.
Chinese is both singular and plural. Chinese is also an adjective, not a noun. Therefore there is no possessive tense. A Chinese man's purse. Now if you are looking for "eses".... Try female, plural possessive of Prince. Princesses'
It is an adjective, so there is no plural. One Chinese person, two Chinese people, three Chinese meals, four Chinese cities.
The noun Chinese is an uncountable noun, it has no plural form. The possessive form is Chinese's.Example: The Chinese's diet is based on rice and vegetables.
Probably it is the same as the word Chinese. Chinese is plural and singular. She is Balinese. They are also Balinese.
In Chinese, the plural form of the word "minute" is "分钟" (fēnzhōng).
The plural of Shar-Pei is "Shar-Pei". "Shar-Pei" was originally a Chinese word and Chinese words do not have separate singular and plural forms.
The plural of Shih Tzu is "Shih Tzu". "Shih Tzu" was originally a Chinese word and Chinese words do not have separate singular and plural forms.
ni or nin (more formal) for singular nimen or ninmen for plural In chinese characters: 你 You > singular 您 们 > You (formal) plural