Knights is a plural. It is the plural for knight.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
applied is does not have a plural but is apply it does have a plural.
The plural is a regular plural, attics.
The plural of 'bunch' is bunches.The plural of 'ant' is ants.The plural of 'batch' is batches.The plural of 'day' is days.The plural of 'chimney' is chimneys.The plural of 'tomato' is tomatoes.The plural of 'umbrella' is umbrellas.The plural of 'donkey' is donkeys.The plural of 'sky' is skies.The plural of 'foot' is feet.The plural of 'show' is shows.
knights.
A knight in ancient Rome was called eques. The genitive plural ("of knights") is equitum.
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but has a different meaning (one & won, night & knight). A plural homophone is the same thing, but it's plural instead of singular (nights & knights).
This is likely one of these: vocals - (plural noun) singing voices on a recording vassals - (plural noun) feudal knights loyal to a king or other ruler
Water-melonS Sand-castleS Phone-bookS just add an S at the end of a compound word... ta da it becomes plural!
Arthur knights
Siege = Sieges. Ex. In the Mandalorian Wars, the Mandalorians staged sieges in three separate Sectors of Republic Space simultaneously. (In Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic)
the knights of the round table
You need to get the Black Knights because they are the strongest knights.
That depends on what Knights you are talking about. Are you talking about the medieval Knights in each Kingdom, the Knights of Malta, the Knights Templar? You are going to have to be a little more specific to get a meaningful answer.
The knights of Columbus are catholic. The knights of Columbus are catholic.
knights are in battle. :)