there is no difference. It is called American english, also known as dumb english.
No, the plural of leaf is leaves.
No.The leaves have fallen.ORThe leaf has fallen.ORThe leafs are on the ground.Another answer:It is correct British usage. It is uncommon American usage.
Yes, the noun leaves is a common noun, the plural form for the singular leaf. The noun leaves is a word for any leaves of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Green Leaves Road, Lawrence, IN or Leaves Lane, Charlotte, NCWhispering Leaves (tea shop & cafe), Philadelphia, PA"House of Leaves", a novel by Mark Z. Danielewski"House of Blue Leaves", a play by John GuareThe Toronto Maple Leafs (?) Hockey TeamALSOLeaves could be the third person singular form of the verb leave.The train leaves at 7:00am everyday.
Pestilence stricken multitudes is used by the poet P.B.Shelly in his poem 'Ode to West Wind' to describe the the diseased decaying leafs of Autumn blown away by the West wind to the wintry bed. This means multiple people stricken with disease
; trefoil : c.1400, from Anglo-Fr. trifoil (c.1265), from O.Fr. trefeuil, from L. trifolium "three-leaved plant," from tri- "three" + folium "leaf" (see folio). Source: Online Etymology Dictionary :
leafs
it leafs clues
leaves is the plural, leaf is the singular
Leaves, mostly.
It has petals but no leaves.
No, the plural of leaf is leaves.
Broad leafs are plants with broad leaves. These leaves capture water, so the plants have extra water on hand for when water is scarce.
It is one leaf or many leaves
No, leaves are made out of paper.
purple leafs
A Rose has leaves and flowers.
Leaves contain photosynthetic pigments. Leaves also aid in traspiration