The plural is corgis (pronounced corgees)
Edit: One would think this is the plural form. However, true corgi people know that the correct plural form of corgi is corgwn, sort of like how oxen is plural of ox.
The noun 'corgi' is a common noun, a word for a breed of herding dog. The type of corgi named for its region of origin is a proper noun: Welsh corgi Penbroke corgi (or Pembroke Welsh corgi) Cardigan Welsh corgi
The correct spelling of the dog variety is "Corgi". More specifically it is "Welsh Corgi".
It is a Welsh word, 'Cor' means small and 'Ci' means dog
Corgi
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
Welsh Corgi plural would be Welsh Corgis.
The noun 'corgi' is a common noun, a word for a breed of herding dog. The type of corgi named for its region of origin is a proper noun: Welsh corgi Penbroke corgi (or Pembroke Welsh corgi) Cardigan Welsh corgi
Answer Queen Elizabeth is famous for keeping Corgis.
A corgi is a dog
Corgi IS a breed.
Corgi International was created in 1956.
Corgi Classics was created in 1956.
Corgi trucks can be purchased from many sites around the web. Sites which offer Corgi trucks for sale include eBay, the Corgi website, Gumtree and Argos.
The Cardigan Welsh Corgi is known for having a tail, while the Pembroke Welsh Corgi is typically born without a tail (called being "bobtail").
no there is not. Can you prove that by a web site. that there are no miniature corgi's. I have been looking for a small Welsh Corgi,and there are smaller ones then normal.
she has 4 corgi and 4 dachshunds/corgis mixes.the dachshund/corgi mixes are called dorgis.
awsomeThe word "Corgi" is either from the Welsh "cor" (dwarf) and "ci" (dog). The "ci" becoming "gi" by normal mutation resulting in corgi. Another interpretation is that of "cur dog" or "Cur". This interpretation can be dated back to one of the earliest dictionaries, to Wyllam Salesbury's "A Dictionary in Englyshe and Weslhe" London, 1574, where there is a reference to the "Korgi ne gostoc", that is, Corgi or curre dogge. (The use of the K rather than the C at that time was perfectly proper and eventually the K was no longer used interchangeably with the C.) The connection of the word "Corgi" with "Cur" has considerable historical support as there are many references to Corgwn (plural of Corgi - pronounced Corg'n, sound out like oxen) in many a cywydd (a song of praise) in the 14th and 15th centuries.