Oh, dude, the plural of dress is "dresses." It's like when you have more than one dress, you add that fancy little "-es" at the end to make it plural. So, if you have a closet full of dresses, you've got dresses on dresses on dresses.
The singular possessive of "sister" is "sister's." For example, "I am borrowing my sister's dress."
Yes, the word dress is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a garment, a thing.The word dress is also a verb and an adjective.Example uses:Noun: I bought a new dress for the benefit tonight.Verb: I will dress after I have my breakfast.Adjective: A dress coat will really make that suit look great.
well that's in plural so i guess you could say clothes department. Another word for clothing is wardrobe or dress (department).
The word sought is probably the plural noun "dresses." The same spelling is used for the verb "to dress" (the third-person singular conjugation in the present tense).
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural form for the noun dress is dresses.The plural possessive form is dresses'.example: These dresses' designers just have no concept of a normal body type.
Dress code is a noun. The plural form is dress codes.
Singular - The dress' belt. Plural - The dresses' belts
The plural possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe to the plural ending -s or -es. The plural of dressis dresses. So the plural possessive is dresses'. Notice that the apostrophe comes after the -s, not before it. And example in a sentence is: I like the color of those dresses, but I don't like the dresses' patterns.
Un robe (fem. singular), des robes (fem. plural)
The word dresses is indicating more than one, or plural. Dress is a single noun because it is only one. Hope this helps! :)
WOMEN IS TO WOMEN IS TO DRESS AS TO dress But if the question was meant as WOMAN is to WOMEN is to DRESS is to the answer would be: Dress is to Dresses. Woman is the singular representing one woman, women is the plural of woman meaning more than one.
When referring to the noun, 'dress' means 'jurk'. When referring to the verb: Dress = (aan)kleden I dress = Ik kleed (me aan) He/she dresses = Hij/zij kleedt (zich aan) You dress (singular) = Jij kleedt (je aan) You dress (plural) = Jullie kleden (je aan) We dress = Wij kleden (ons aan) They dress = Zij kleden (zich aan)
When referring to the noun, 'dress' means 'jurk'. When referring to the verb: Dress = (aan)kleden I dress = Ik kleed (me aan) He/she dresses = Hij/zij kleedt (zich aan) You dress (singular) = Jij kleedt (je aan) You dress (plural) = Jullie kleden (je aan) We dress = Wij kleden (ons aan) They dress = Zij kleden (zich aan)
The singular possessive of "sister" is "sister's." For example, "I am borrowing my sister's dress."
The interrogative pronouns are who, whom, which, whose, and what. All interrogative pronouns can be used for singular or plural noun forms. For example:singular: Who is the girl in the blue dress? Whatis her name?plural: Who are the boys on the bicycles? What are their names?
Yes. Suits can also be a verb - the third person singular form of suit eg That dress suits you