For boss as a noun, you could use:
The Big Cheese
Head Honcho
El Jefe
Top Dog
For boss as an adjective, you could use:
extremely cool
awesome
sweet
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
There is no plural form of pupae. Pupae is the plural form of pupa.
No, the plural form of jelly is jellies.
The plural form of the noun boss is bosses.The plural possessive form is bosses'.example: The bosses' meeting is at ten this morning.
The plural form of boss is bosses.
The noun boss is the singular form; the plural form is bosses. Example:We have too many bosses.
The possessive form of the singular noun boss is boss's, and the possessive form of the plural noun bosses is bosses'.Example: The bosses' meeting is at ten.
Both are correct:The form boss's is the singular, possessive form of the singular noun boss.Example: You will need the boss's authorization for that expense.The form bosses is the plural form for the singular noun boss.Example: How many bosses do your have?Note: The plural possessive form is bosses'.Example: The bosses' meeting is at ten.
Correct spelling: one boss, two bosses.
The possessive form for the singular noun boss is boss's.The possessive form for the plural noun bosses is bosses'.EXAMPLESI put the memo on my boss's desk.The bosses' meeting is at ten.
boss is singular bosses is plural
Correct form: bosses' day.
No, boss's is a singular possessive noun. Bosses is the correct plural form.
The correct form depends on the context. "Bosses" is the plural form, referring to multiple bosses. "Boss's" is the possessive form, indicating something that belongs to one boss. For example, "The bosses have a meeting" versus "The boss's office is large."
If it is used meaning 'manager' then in its plural form "bosses" is indeed a noun. As in 'The bosses gathered in the meeting room'. However if it is used thus: 'His wife bosses him around' then in this usage "bosses" is a verb.