A sentence does not have a plural form. A sentence can be a compound sentence; two independent clauses, usually joined by a conjunction.
Your sentence has one plural noun, 'friends'; the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural but we know that it is singular because it says 'you are one of'. The only way to make the subject pronoun 'you' into a plural is to drop the words 'one of', making the sentence:
You are my friends.
Yes, friends' is the plural possessive form of friend.
The plural noun in the sentence is children (plural form of child).
singular: "un ami" or "une amie" (for a female friend) plural: "des amis" or "des amies" (for an all-female group of friends)
No, the word its is a singular pronoun, the possessive form of "it". The plural form of the possessive pronoun "its" is theirs.The plural form of the possessive adjective "its" is their.
Yes, the noun 'mob' is a count noun; mob has a singular and plural form (mob, mobs). singular: Did you see that mob of people? plural: All the mobs joined together to form a larger mob.
The plural form of the noun friend is friends.The plural possessive form is friends'.example sentence: My friends' names are Jack and Jill.
There is no plural form. Do and Do not are verbs
The plural form of sentence is sentences.
The possessive form of the plural noun friends is friends'.Example sentence: My friends' names are Jack and Jill.
Yes. If you remove the word friends the sentence is still correct.
The plural form for the sentence, "Who is she?" is "Who are they?"
The singular form is friend; the plural form is friends.
The plural form of "friend" is "friends."
The word friends is the plural form of the singular noun friend.example: My friends came over to watch a movie.The possessive form of the singular noun friend is friend's.example: It was nice to see our friends' kids at the picnic.An apostrophe "s" at the end of the word shows possession.
The possessive form of the plural noun friends is friends'.Example: They were able to recover from the flood with all of their friends' help
The plural possessive form is friends'. The apostrophe indicates that something in the sentence belongs to the friends.Example: It was nice to see our friends' kids at the picnic.
Yes, the compound noun 'best friend' is singular. The plural form is 'best friends'.