Slate
an appropriate candidate.
That man was a good candidate for the job because he was well qualified.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
"Candidate" is a noun.
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
The plural form for the noun candidate is candidates; the plural possessive is candidates'.
The plural form of the word "candidate" is "candidates."
Candidate word is: moose -- the plural is moose, not mooses.
The noun people is a plural noun without adding an -s at the end.The possessive form of the plural noun people is people's.Example: The people's questions began to overwhelm the candidate.
The noun people is a plural noun without adding an -s at the end.The possessive form of the plural noun people is people's.Example: The people's questions began to overwhelm the candidate.
Yes, the plural is candidates. But every candidate has one application, so applications must be plural. A possessive means the person has ownership of something or the item is related to them. So then, candidates (plural) becomes plural possessive: candidates' with apostrophe at the end.
The apostrophe and letter "s" at the end of the word indicate possession by a single noun, the candidate. "Candidate" without the apostrophe or "s" is a single noun; if the "s" were included, but there was no apostrophe ("candidates"), the word would be a plural noun meaning more than one candidate. If the apostrophe were to follow the "s" ("candidates' "), it would mean that multiple candidates possess something.
a candidate is a candidate
a candidate is a candidate
Suitors is the plural form of the word "suitor", which means "a romantic candidate, a person (usually male) seeking the romantic interest of another (usually female)".
A person who runs for public office is a candidate, like a presidential candidate.
"Consider me a candidate" is the correct phrase to use.